One of the coolest aspects about cinema is the many ways that a film can be shot. These days, there are people making entire short films using an iPhone, which is fun and a great tool for indie and ...
This guide will help you get started with your film photography journey whether it's learning the right aperture to how to ...
IMAX's new film camera, first used to film The Odyssey, has been named after two of the company's biggest pioneers.
No Film School on MSN
Meet “Keighley”: IMAX’s new 70mm film camera used to shoot Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Odyssey’
Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey is set to be a landmark film for many reasons. As the first feature to be shot entirely on ...
Digital Camera World on MSN
The Canon camera that let you see everything and split the photography world In half!
For professional sports photographers (and a very few others) one of the big bugaboos with Single Lens Reflex cameras is the loss of the image during the precise moment that the photo is captured.
Hosted on MSN
Did you know that Kodak collaborated with Canon and Nikon to turn their film cameras into DSLRs?
A video on Instagram reminded me of Kodak's doomed DCS series, which launched in 1991 and was ultimately axed in 2005. DCS stands for Digital Camera System and was Kodak’s pioneering foray into the ...
There is something inherently tactile and emotional about film. There’s a reason award-winning films like Anora and TV shows like Severance still get shot on film despite how expensive and limiting it ...
Photography has never been more accessible than it is today, with almost everyone in possession of a smartphone also having a camera. However, those who want to go beyond just taking a photo for the ...
Polaroid cameras have been very popular for a very long time and are especially hot gifts this year. Fresh film is easy to ...
Camp Snap is known for its vintage-inspired point-and-shoot gear — we tested out the company's latest CS-8 camera at Disneyland to see how our videos compared to archive footage from the 1960s. By ...
After 'Oppenheimer,' the big-screen company designed new cameras and production tech to allow Nolan to shoot in Imax, on film, end-to-end in his upcoming epic, and not just for select sequences. By ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results