Washi Z was originally created for aerial vegetation mapping, and therefore with excellent contrast differentiation between different shades of green, this is the perfect 35mm landscape photographer's film!
Check out loads more detail via our film review below:
For more information about the brand check out our bio of Film Washi
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When you buy your camera film from us we can ship it across the UK, Europe, USA, New Zealand, Australia and Canada (more countries planned soon!) So buy Washi Z Film 35mm B&W ISO 400 today and dive back into the fun of 35mm film photography!
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Perfect for:Landscapes, Street Photography, Creative/Abstract
Infrared
What a mixture! Infrared and nature photography together. I quite liked the results. Might do it again.
P
P.K. (Wigan, GB)
Perfect for:Landscapes, Creative/Abstract
Washi family
Interesting company. I mostly shot this with red filter, to get "the look". Pictures are nice, especially paired with nature photography. Manual cameras only.
L
Luke G. (Bristol, GB)
Perfect for:Landscapes, Street Photography, Creative/Abstract, Travel
Washi Z Olympus XA
Took this film to Knoydart in the highlands of Scotland, UK. Many shades of green lent themselves well to this film.
I used this film on a nice bright day near where I life, and it works really well in busy scenes that have quite nice light. It is possible to accidentally crush highlights but that's easily rescued in post. Just make sure you do have proper sunlight to take advantage of the near-infrared properties
K
K.L. (Stevenage, GB)
Accreditation Handles:@lamerlad on IG krislockyearphotography.foliopic.com
Not the best results
I got this film in my Wonderbox. I have such a backlog of rolls that I didn't really spend any time checking out its characteristics before using it. The results were underwhelming. Quite a few shots came out rather under-exposed. I'm guessing the near-infrared nature of the film means that one might need to compensate in certain circumstances. As a result, many of the results are low in contrast with blocked-out shadows and poor contrast. In high contrast situations, one either ends-up with blown highlights or blocked-out shadows. The most curious thing, however, is the triple-shadow effect which shows in some of the photographs I'll upload with this review. I have never seen this before and have no idea as to the cause. This isn't a film I'll return to. I'm guessing that with some experience and more careful choice of subjects it might work well, but I haven't the time and patience to squeeze something good out of an awkward film.