5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

By Greg May

Hello old friend. We have previous. But that is ok, I’m happy to take you out and walk you around. Doing what you do best. Capturing moments in time. Moments he’d nod curtly at and enjoy. I hope.

These days, every time I shoot with the Canon AE1 Program is memorable. I usually keep the 28mm on as it is the same as my Leica Q and tends to be the way I view the world.  Together they make a light combination and one that people don’t look at twice in the street. Just another camera. Perfect for taking it places a bigger camera normally gets left behind.

The simplicity, and usefulness, of a aperture priority camera is often looked out with an upward nose turn. I for one welcome it. Sometimes it is ok for photography to be easy. To be, of all things, fun. Not a task to be mastered. Focus on the image for a while, ignore the technicalities.

All images were shot with my oddly favourite film Kentmere 400 and scanned at home with a Plustek 8200i.

Website – https://gregorymay.ie
IG – https://www.instagram.com/gregory.c.may/

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Comments

Camera Review Blog No. 04 – Canon AE-1 Program – Alex Luyckx | Blog on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 12/11/2019

[…] my word on the Canon AE-1 Program, you can check out the reviews by other awesome camera reviewers! 35mmc – Five Frame with a Canon AE-1 Program Down the Road – Canon AE-1 Program Review Mike Eckman Dot Com – Student Camera Showdown […]
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Noan MOUSY on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 13/09/2018

I have the same battery since 2 years and I have shooted like 10 films with it. For me the batteries are very reliable.
This camera is fantastic for me because of my personal history : My father had one in the past, and my grand-father too.
I have a 50-135mm zoom who I don’t use very much because of the bad aperture and not very good quality but I got a 25 mm and 50 mm are very good, and the 200mm zoom can be very good to.

And the best is that this stuff cost me less than 100€ because FD canon mount are so cheap !
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Patrick Copley on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 08/03/2018

It's not aperture priority I think... either full program mode or shutter priority.
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Terry B replied:

Comment posted: 08/03/2018

My recollection of the AE-1 is that it was a shutter priority and fully manual camera only. Although the camera required a battery to work at all, it could not set intermediate speeds and which would be needed to enable it to provide full program auto mode. Early auto exposure cameras were either aperture or shutter priority only. Minolta were first to market a camera that could do both and provide programmed auto and full manual as well with their XD-7/XD-11 released in 1977.

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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 08/03/2018

Indeed, a bit more playing and it is shutter priority only. Batteries in it tend to last a long time though!

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David Hill on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

That is some righteous advertisement for Kentmere 400. Or the AE1, or the 28, or even the photographer. Maybe even some of each, but Greg, you surely do work them together mighty well.
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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

David, thank you for your kind comment! For a cheap film K400 is excellent if you shoot it right. I do like it, and usually get some good images from it.

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Dexter replied:

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

Any recommendations for shooting the Kentmere? I've bought a test roll to try prior to buying a 100ft reel for home rollling.

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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

Not really, it tends to have a high degree of flexibility. It's ok in low light and tends to do well in very bright light too. Just shoot it and see!

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Karl Valentin on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

The Canon AE-1 was my first "real" camera but if I compare it now to one of my old Nikons
it just feels not half the way as solid.
The time I used it I never trusted the automatic and handled the settings manualy - so why
a program automatic makes life easier if it dont work for 100% ?
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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

Good thing with the AE-1 is you can still shoot it without the aperture priority. In that use, it's no different from my M6 bar the ergonomics, of which, I enjoy.

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karellen on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

When using digital at 90% I use aperture priority, 5% pentax's aperture shutter priority (it triggers auto iso), and 5% full manual. But when working with film I prefer using full manual for two reasons: the first is that I have to think carefully to which shutter speed/aperture to use depending on the light, as I fear that letting auto could lead to too long shutter speeds and thus blurry pictures. If I am lucky I would be able to feel that the shutter stayed open too long and I would take it again, but anyway I still would have lost a frame from the roll.
I can accept it on digital where I can check straight after the shot, but not on film where I discover it only weeks later... The second reason, not practical, is that I prefer mechanical shutters, if not for reliability I like to hear the personality of the camera that emerges in the form of all the mechanical noises it makes!
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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 07/03/2018

Can't not hear the shutter on the AE-1, stealth is not it's forte!

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Dave on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 06/03/2018

I prefer aperture priority shooting. Yeah, I can do full manual, and I sometimes do it, but if I don't have to, why make it hard on myself?
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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 06/03/2018

Agree with you, unless I'm trying to achieve something specific with the AE-1, it's generally on AP.

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Fabio replied:

Comment posted: 06/03/2018

mmm, the AE1 is Shutter Priority Only, isn't it? ;P You need an A1 for AP...

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Reinhold on 5 frames with a Canon AE-1 Program – By Greg May

Comment posted: 06/03/2018

Thanks for sharing ;)
My own AE1 just gave up when firing the shutter. No more shutter release and no more film advance lever movement :(
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Greg May replied:

Comment posted: 06/03/2018

Tried getting it serviced? Mine died about 3 years ago, brought it to my local backstreet camera shop and they fixed it for me. Cost about £20 if I recall.

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