1. I need to keep the equipment as simple as possible. It will be mostly candids and reportage-style shooting, mostly at locations where I can't haul a camera bag with me. It means one body, one lens. I am leaning toward a 35/1.4 lens, but some think that 50mm is better. I'm not a fan of zooms, since they are slower (or insanely expensive for the fast ones), and a good portion of this shoot will be at night or indoors. Any ideas?
2. I typically shoot 400 Tri-X all the time, and I want to shoot B&W on this trip too, but I have to consider that our group of friends is very international, with WIDELY varied skin tones. A few (like me) are fair/blue-eyed, there are some mid-range Carribean islanders, and a few from all over India, from the lighter-skinned Northerners, to darker Southerners. The Man of Honor (the groom to be) is the darkest-skinned of them all. I want to be able to do justice to everyone, but I've never shot such a vide variety of skin tones. Will 400 Tri-X be appropriate? Is there something better for this? Are yellow filters helpful in this situation? Do I adjust the exposure to compensate?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
And, I agree about the flash - I never use the on-camera flash (I only own one camera that even has one, not that I ever turn it on; I mean, why do they bother?). And since I'm travelling light this trip, that means available light only. A bit of a challenge for me, but we'll see.
I like the grain. That's what attracted me to Tri-X in the first place - the ability to push it with grain. Never gone to 1600, though.
Has anyone had experience with wide skin-tone differences? I've seen the same African photojournalism that everyone else has, so I know it can be shot beautifully, but I've never shot a group that is so different before. I'm worried that my friend is going to come out with little or no contrast if I just go with standard meter exposure.
Have fun!
Have fun!
I agree.
I've shot a fair amount on T-Max 400 pushed to 1600 without a flash. It's a bit grainy. I don't know if that would bother you. I like the look myself, and find it better than dealing with the crappy lighting of on-camera flash, unless it's just a fill. If it's going to be really dim, you could try Ilford 3200 Delta.
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