Film Fridays #1 / Reflectography, the glory of shooting reflections on 35mm.

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I started shooting reflections with my various 35mm cameras about 2 years ago. I was actually trying to achieve some sneaky street photography in my local area of Leith by shooting through shop windows, but when I developed the results they were quite different from what I'd planned. I love it, it gives you an insight into a particular time and place, the images have many layers and this makes them interesting to look at time and time again.

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Perhaps you could call it a glimpse behind the camera. When i'm shooting reflections I always use the sunny 16 rule. And I try to keep my aperture as low as possible so that all elements of the image are in focus. I don't really plan it to much, just shoot as I go when ever I see light hit a window.

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Black and white images work better, the different contrasts separate the two perspectives captured. With colour elements blend more and colours can clash and look odd.

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This image is two reflections captured as a double exposed image. The image is very busy and messy, sort of a failed experiment. So keep it simple.

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This is my favourite reflectography image, captured by accident at an Airport in Perth Australia. It is a self-portrait I took late at night, without realising the plane I would board accidentally featured in the final shot. And funnily enough it was a plane that almost crashed in Indonesia. Probably one of the worst experiences of my life.

Have a great day and start shooting 35mm. It's cheap, rewarding, hipster and bags of fun.
Cotton xXx

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