A festive treat for Analogue Wonderland customers! FPP Yeti 35mm BW is an orthochromatic (blue sensitive) positive motion picture film.
Its intended use is for direct contact copying titles and mats in motion picture work. Yeti has ultra fine grain and creamy tones make it perfect for pictorial use in your 35mm SLR camera. This type of film needs to be shot in daylight (or using flash/strobe). Avoid yellow filtration and shooting in indoor/tungsten light unless you want some interesting muted effects through the image.
Please note the low ISO! Check the metering before shooting with a hand-held meter, or phone light meter app. You can also set your camera's internal meter to ISO 25 and then open the aperture 2-3 f-stops.
FPP is short-hand for the Film Photography Project: a US-based collection of projects headed up by the charismatic Mike Raso. They are most famous within the global film community for their podcast (entering it's 10th year in existence) as well as the associated School Camera Donation Program whereby donations are sought and sorted to bring analogue photography back into high schools and colleges all over the country.
Not only that but Mike also runs the FPP store which sells a multitude of analogue film products all over the US and hand-rolls a fantastic selection of unique films. We are honoured to bring some of those films to the European market and hope you enjoy shooting them as much as Mike has making them!
Video Review
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Perfect for:Landscapes, Street Photography, Architecture, Creative/Abstract
Cool
As Analogue Wonderland's description says, you can shoot it at 25 iso and try to push it through development, at least two stops. The result came out much better than I expected. Very risky roll to shoot. Only for adventurous people.
P
Paula K. (Wallasey, GB)
Perfect for:Landscapes, Street Photography, Architecture, Creative/Abstract
Accreditation Handles:Instagram @citygirl1919
Risque
I shot this film at 25 iso (the lowest I could have with my camera) and pushed two stops in development. The result came out quite nice. It is pretty scary film to shoot but thanks to pushing, it is possible. Still, I prefer Ilford products, which have higher iso and it's much more cheaper than this.