Trends come and go and different cameras and styles will always be rotating in popularity. I just want to encourage people to focus on having fun with their art and making it the way they want. I’m super excited to dip my toes into something unpredictable and foreign. I’ve never, ever shot expired film before, but I tripped across a lot of expired rolls for a great price and just couldn’t turn it down. I’m definitely still in the learning phase with 4x5 and I can’t wait to create more in that format! Also just today I’ve decided to take the plunge into expired film. Is there anything you hope to experiment with next? Anything we can expect? It keeps me on my toes and keeps my artistic life interesting by learning and finding new ways to create my images. It’s really challenged me and made me stop and really think about what I really want out of these mediums and what I hope to achieve with them. For example, over the last year I’ve taken the plunge into large format sheet film and dry plate ambrotypes. I think challenge is key for me to stay inspired and motivated! My father has always said I’m addicted to learning, so I like to challenge myself by exploring different formats and processes in film photography that are unknown to me. How do you like to challenge your creative process? I can look at a building one day and then notice something completely different the next time I visit because the light and conditions will make something completely different pop out. I love how they change depending on the time of day, year, and weather when I see them. Who has passed through their doors and how many stories have taken place in their walls. I love thinking about the history behind them. They feel like a time capsule to me, forever preserving the moment in time of when they were built. What about houses and buildings intrigue you? I love how magical the results are and how it makes me feel like I’ve been transported to an alternative reality from the world around me." I shot my first LomoChrome Purple ever in the Spring of 2021 and I quickly fell in love. I feel like whenever I shoot it, I know exactly what I’m going to get and it never lets me down. It’s by far my favorite standard C-41 film stock. "Lomo CN 100 is such a reliable and dependable film stock for me. I’ve been so unbelievably happy with the results. These were taken throughout Southeast Wisconsin! The CN 100 images were shot in downtown Milwaukee with my Ricoh Diacord TLR and the LomoChrome Purple shots were taken with my Bronica ETRSi in downtown Milwaukee and a number of county and state parks in the Milwaukee and Madison areas. Where were these taken, and what do you make of the results? You shot these gorgeous landscapes with our Color Negative 100 and LomoChrome Purple. It’s about having fun expanding the horizons of film photography and learning to see your world in new and creative ways. Lomography to me is about exploration and experimentation. Currently I’ve really been into my new Toyo 4x5 field camera, my Bronica ETRSi for 120, and my Pentax K1000 and Nikon N80 for 35mm. With over 50 cameras in my collection it’s hard to nail down just one favorite! I usually have a handful of cameras at any given moment I’m really vibing with. You’re known as Just how many cameras do you have and which one(s) are you loving right now? I love waiting for my film to get developed and seeing the end results. I love the uniqueness of each camera and film stock. It makes me focus on what I really want to capture. I love having a finite amount of frames I can shoot. As for what keeps me passionate about it, I just love the whole process from start to finish. There was just something so beautiful about that camera I knew I needed to have it. When did you first press the shutter button? And what keeps you passionate about analogue photography?Īs a 90’s child I technically grew up shooting film, but I didn’t take up film photography as a serious artistic medium until about 4-5 years ago when I tripped across a Canon AE-1 at the thrift store and decided to give it a go on a whim. I’m extremely passionate about the importance of women in film photography and I’ve made it a mission to fight for their fair representation as well. I love to explore the world around me through the lens of my camera and capture the unique beauty of the neighborhoods and landscapes in Southeast Wisconsin. I shoot a variety of cameras and photographic processes that span over 150 years. Thank you! I’m a film photographer based in Milwaukee. Hello Danielle, welcome to the Lomography Magazine! May you tell us a bit about yourself?
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