I’m a latecomer to film photography, but have been working hard to catch up. After reading a lot about CineStill’s products, I recently had the chance to shoot a roll of its 800T film stock during a street photography session in my hometown of Houston, Texas.

Buffalo Bayou hems the northern boundary of Downtown Houston. The city’s original Merchants & Manufacturers Building, a red-and-white brick structure that’s now part of the campus of the University of Houston-Downtown, was built on the banks of the bayou adjacent to Allen’s Landing, the birthplace of Houston.

The immediate surroundings form Houston’s Historic District. Several jails and courthouses are clustered in this area, coupled with parks, restaurants and high-rises. Downtown’s main artery, Main Street, carries traffic southwest through Midtown to the Texas Medical Center and onto the old Astrodome. In recent decades, the city invested in a light-rail train network that runs along the Main Street Corridor.

This is one of my preferred destinations for street photography. It offers a diversity of people and landscapes and contains remnants of the past juxtaposed to modern life in the Bayou City.

The five frames featured here were made on my first roll of CineStill 800T, using a Fujica GS645 medium format camera that my wife, Rachel, gave me for a 40th birthday present this past year. Exposed at box speed, the images were made on April 14, 2018, which was a typical rainy day, mixed with bright sunshine, in Houston.

According to the manufacturer, 800T is not intended for photographing intense points of light, and I discovered why. The results I got from photographing one scene, with heavy cloud cover, were markedly different from those featuring glowing traffic lights and beams of sunlight. The film definitely seems optimized for the former conditions, but I also can’t help but like the stylistic look of the latter. The fact that you’re able to produce such varying results on the same roll of film might frustrate some photographers. I’ll shoot more of this film if only for the fun of its mystery.

~ Michael

Submit your 5 Frames… today

Get your own 5 Frames featured by submitting your article using this form or by sending an email via the contact link at the top of the page.

Share your knowledge, story or project

The transfer of knowledge across the film photography community is the heart of EMULSIVE. You can add your support by contributing your thoughts, work, experiences and ideas to inspire the hundreds of thousands of people who read these pages each month. Check out the submission guide here.

If you like what you’re reading you can also help this passion project by heading over to the EMULSIVE Patreon page and contributing as little as a dollar a month. There’s also print and apparel over at Society 6, currently showcasing over two dozen t-shirt designs and over a dozen unique photographs available for purchase.

Similar stuff on EMULSIVE

5 responses to “5 Frames… With CineStill 800T (EI 800 / 120 format / Fujifilm GS645 Professional)”

  1. @HamishGill So 800T is usable pretty much anytime?

  2. OOOOO You’re based in Houston too?!? Also, I love the photos!

  3. Colleen Bryant Avatar
    Colleen Bryant

    Let’s see yours, Bill

  4. Colleen Bryant Avatar
    Colleen Bryant

    Beautiful grouping that captures an essence of houston I can’t quite put into words- that red glow….I can’t see red without thinking of this image now

  5. These are quite bad photographs.

 

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from EMULSIVE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from EMULSIVE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading