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Hello
This has been gathering a little dust in my cupboard. I'm not using it.
http://www.chromeindustries.com/us/en/bags/camera-bags/niko-messenger
Get at me :)
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@greeno Yup..it'll need all of that. The back wheel is pretty much brand new. You'll probably also want a single speed cog on the back as it's currently got a 17T (I think) fixed cog.
As I said, it'll need a bit of work, but with the £100 you wanted to spend, you could make it a decent little beater.
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I have a Mongoose Maurice that is sitting in my room doing nothing. It's my beater so it's not in the most amazing shape but it'll get you around.
I've put on some BLB risers and it has a F5 Lattice chainring (http://wearefactoryfive.com/product/product-f5-lattice-chainring/).
No breaks or tires though. Bit of a Frankenbike but it's done me well...Yours for free if you want to collect in North London. I can post some pics later if you'd like.
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I have a little Gossen Digisix. They've come up in price but are worth the money. Battery lasts for ages.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Gossen-GO-4006-2-Digisix-Light/dp/B009U08GC0
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Howdy
I'm not using it as much as I thought so I thought I'd let me GoPro Hero3 Black go.
It comes with:- GoPro Hero3 Black
- All the various connectors, arms and cases etc. (not pictured here)
- Bicycle Clamp
- Spare battery
- 16Gig memory card + USB memory card reader
- Knuckle Duster hand grip (don't ask)
I'm looking for £200 for the lot.
Collection in North London or I can drop off over the weekend.PM me any questions.
- GoPro Hero3 Black
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I quite like Fp4 but if you want quicker turn around I'd suggest XP2 400. It's a C41 process film so you can use any old lab to get the film processed. Most places seem to send their B&W film away for processing.
For labs I'm a fan of Peak Imaging in Sheffield. I've also heard good things about Aperture in Rathbone place. If you check this thread and maybe the SPFG thread Indra gives some good tips on where to go...I trust his judgement more than my own most times.
.jb
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I scan my negatives using Vuescan and then use Photoshop/C0lorPerfect to get the colours right. This is probably the best tutorial I've found on the process...
http://benneh.net/techshit/vuescan-colorperfect-a-guide/
The only problem is the costs of VueScan and ColorPerfect. But worth it if you ask me.
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Howdy
Before I dish it out to the world, would anyone be interested in my Yashica Electro 35 GS.
I've run a roll through it (a while back) and it appears to be working 95%. I say 95% because when you use the meter there's a weird sound that comes from the camera, kind of like an electrical contact isn't quite contacting. Other than that it's all good. Glass is clear and it has the battery adapter I got from some random in the States. No lens cap though :(
It's been sitting far too quietly on my shelf at home and I'd much rather someone use it.Any offers ? I accept money, beer, hugs and film. No first born though. I'm not a kid person.
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@maro_donald Great pics man...what's your Flickr address/name/handle/magic number ?
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Do you do any colour correction in your scanning/post processing ? That was my biggest downfall in my process. I'm still working on it, but I'm now very happy with my colour images.
Scan -> raw -> Lightroom -> Photoshop + ColorPerfect -> Lightroom -> Export
ColorPerfect isn't cheap but so very worth it...
http://www.colorneg.com/colorperfect.html?lang=en