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I own a Nikon N75 film camera?
Last year on my birthday (2013) I purchase a Nikon N75 35mm film camera. I purchased it because I have a thing for photography mainly film photography. I love the richness in a film picture. I also love the vintage feel to it. So I begin by investing in a good but fairly affordable camera. Does anyone here have experience with using the Nikon N75 35mm camera? If so please provide pictures of your best craft using this camera. I am extremely interested in perusing photography. I have not used this camera much, but I do wish to change that in 2014. All pointers is excepted.
Also those who have experience in other film camera inform me on your opinion regarding some.of the other brands you've used. Provide pictures of your work if possible.
4 Answers
- retiredPhilLv 77 years ago
Here is a full review of the camera.
http://www.kenrockwell.com/nikon/n75.htm
While I can understand why you might want to see the results that others get with the camera, you just need to know that it is a quality camera that can get you quality results. While the camera is capable of getting quality results, you and the lens are the next items. And you are the biggest element in quality results. Oh, yes, the lab where you have the film developed makes a huge difference. I recently had film developed that had horrible results. I changed labs and the results were the quality I expected.
- MartinLv 77 years ago
The N75 was sold in the UK as the F75 and it is a good camera. I used to use a custom setting, (I seem to recall it was cs number 7, set to option 2), to set the AE-L button active with spot metering. That then gives you a spot meter built into the camera as well as the default matrix metering. That can be very useful when there's a lot of light contrast.
- PhotofoxLv 77 years ago
Why worry about other people's photographs? Just take your camera out and about, experiment and try all the different settings. It will be far more enjoyable than seeing what others have done. Anyway, how will you know any one else's photos were taken with the same camera!
- Vinegar TasterLv 77 years ago
Please realize that you won't be able to tell what camera took what photo. Digital photos on the other hand are more or less " marked ".
EDIT : Maybe I should explain some digital cameras mark data into each photo. My Nikon D5000 / D80 do. I can upload a photo to a certain web site and it will tell me what camera I used, the lens and settings, and when I took it.