The Crappy Commie Camera Party: In Aveiro With The Zenit 11 And The Deakinizer
Preface: I’ve been a bit sluggish in publishing this post, many because I was so disappointed with how the images turned out after such promise from what I could see through the viewfinder. However, checking the negatives, they were really ‘thin’ and from what I can see need a couple of extra stops of exposure. So I’m going to have another ‘stab’ at this and thought I would publish the original version.
For the past month, at least, I’ve been waiting impatiently for June to arrive. It’s the start of the Crappy Commie Camera Party, the latest iteration of the Shitty Camera Challenge, and is a celebration of all things 20thcentury Eastern Bloc. Back in March, which seems like a lifetime ago, I picked up a Zenit 11 single lens reflex camera and two lenses, a CCCP compliant Industar-50-2, and a Cosina 50mm f1.8 lens. I also have a Pentacon 50mm f1.8 lens, but it’s stuck at the widest aperture.
Now the CCCP is upon us, it’s time to see how the Zenit behaves. For my first outing, I thought I would hit the ground running. I went to Aveiro to collect some film (and drop off some other rolls), and took the Zenit 11, the Pentacon 50mm f1.8, and the Panavision wide-angle converter, my ‘Deakinizer’. If you’re not familiar with the Deakinizer, it was a lens invented by cinematographer Roger Deakins that creates an image with a sharp(ish) centre to the frame and blurred edges. A cheap way to make a Deakinizer is to hold a wide-angle converter reversed in front of a camera lens, and I have the Panavision wide-angle converter (among several others, now) just for this purpose.
The filter thread of the Panavision is 67mm, so I created a 49-67mm step up attachment to fix the Deakinizer securely to the front of the lens. Through the viewfinder the images looked great, though at wide open aperture the shutter speeds required are beyond the capability of the Zenit. So what I’ve done is put an ND64 (6-stop) neutral density filter between the camera lens and the wide-angle converter that should allow me to use the fully open lens with the Deakinizer and get a decent shutter speed.
I loaded a roll of Lomography ISO 100 colour film into the Zenit (and remembered to reset the frame count to zero. For exposure I used the Camera Meter app and rated the film at its box speed of ISO 100. I didn’t have much time in Aveiro, so it was a quick walk to the area around the Melia Ria hotel and up to my favourite little row of Buga bikes near the Forum shopping centre. I rushed through the film, sometimes taking photographs of the same subject from different angles, and hoping that something came out. After completing the film, I rewound it carefully — I’m always afraid of tearing the film I’m these old Soviet-era cameras — and dropped it off at the lab with the other films.
The results were not what I had hoped. Although the Zenit and the Deakinizer, and the ND64 filter, worked a treat, the final results were very soft and heavily vignetted. Yes, I nailed the exposure, but it was difficult to see what was going on in each of the frames. I’ve uploaded the complete album to Flickr so that you can judge for yourself, but I reckon I need to go back to the drawing board and test out some of my other wide-angle converters.
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