5 Frames With An Olympus OM1 MD & Ilford HP5+ – By Julian Higgs

By julianhiggs

If you have read any of my previous posts, you may have noticed a small but growing common thread running through them: the Olympus OM range of compact SLR cameras. I have been using them since early 2016, starting with a borrowed an OM30 from a good friend at the start of my Vinyl Factory photo project. It is good, but requires a stack of five (yes five) little LR/SR44 cells to work! The advance clutch also slipped a few times causing frame overlaps indicating it needed attention. Then, having been bequeathed a “2 Spot” (to use a colloquialism) and bought a used OM2n, I had, inevitably I suppose, begun to hanker after the original. The Olympus OM1.

Much has been written by others on the tech specs of the OM1 on this site and others, so I’m not going to add to the chorus – you can read the timeline story if you want to here.

I’d learned to expose film ‘correctly’ with my late fathers Pentax K1000 through a City & Guilds evening class at a local college in my early twenties. The directness of the all manual camera with a simple needle meter in the viewfinder had been all I’d known. Having used other types of exposure metering in camera since, it now appealed even more. I still cannot believe I sold that camera and all the accessories both he and I had acquired.

Most of the simplicity I was looking for had effectively been achieved with the OM2n in manual mode. This stripped back appeal is something talked about very well by Hamish here. However I often found myself falling back on the excellent aperture priority Auto setting. You can find this all too easily on the little top plate switch on either the “2Spot” or the 2n. I had to change this situation.

After watching a few on Ebay etc. in various conditions, I eventually pulled the trigger on a fully overhauled, early serial, black paint body only from Luton Camera Repair Service. My camera came supplied with a battery conversion, new light seals plus all cleaned and calibrated. There was also just a smidgen of wear to the pentaprism housing paint on the most appropriate corners. Quite an indulgence in my book. Singularity achieved.

Getting back to basics was the intention here. No exposure compensation, and limited manual shutter settings from 1 – 1000th. This means that I have to take a more considered approach to my photography. I have also found that I’ve started to assess light by eye more. Working with Sunny-16 as a starting point, then confirming with the needle; it’s slow progress but I’m getting better. It’s nice to have the meter to confirm or otherwise my initial assessment.

Using the OM1 brings joy to the photography process, with both shutter and aperture dials on the lens barrel, like the 35 SP rangefinder I shoot also, making adjustments with my eye to the big bright viewfinder a breeze

Below are a selection of images for my first couple of rolls with this camera, all either home developed if black and white and scanned by the same lab as my colour film. Colour film processed and scanned at the excellent True Colour Imaging.

Autumn Cherry Leaves
Autumn Cherry Leaves
Fuji 400
Wife and Grandson
Woodland Walks
Fuji 400
Angel In The Mist
Angel In The Mist
Fuji 400
Breakwater at Seasalter, Kent
Breakwater at Seasalter, Kent
Ilford HP5+
Thames Foreshore
Thames Foreshore
Ilford HP5+

If you would like to keep in touch with my work, visit either of the following:
www.julianhiggsphoto.com
www.instagram.com/julian.higgs

Share this post:

Find more similar content on 35mmc

Use the tags below to search for more posts on related topics:

Contribute to 35mmc for an ad-free experience.

There are two ways to contribute to 35mmc and experience it without the adverts:

Paid Subscription – £2.99 per month and you’ll never see an advert again! (Free 3-day trial).

Subscribe here.

Content contributor – become a part of the world’s biggest film and alternative photography community blog. All our Contributors have an ad-free experience for life.

Sign up here.

About The Author

By julianhiggs
A returning film photographer, musician and engineer. Darkroom owner and film lab experimenter. Always looking to see.
View Profile

Comments

Lori on 5 Frames With An Olympus OM1 MD & Ilford HP5+ – By Julian Higgs

Comment posted: 13/03/2019

Another OM shooter! I love mine. It’s such a basic camera, but it feels solid in the hands and takes wonderful pictures.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

julianhiggs replied:

Comment posted: 13/03/2019

I do love my OM's, all four of them.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Bill B on 5 Frames With An Olympus OM1 MD & Ilford HP5+ – By Julian Higgs

Comment posted: 14/03/2019

Thanks for sharing your thoughts. New digital cameras have so many "bells & whistles" that young people getting into photography now must look at the Oly OM line of cameras from the '70's to the introduction of the OM-4ti and shrug their shoulders in amazement that anyone could actually take pictures with these vintage cameras. It's a shame really. If they could only hold the small, delicate, mechanical wonders line the OM-1, I bet they'd be taken aback. Like early air cooled Porsche's, vinyl records played on analogue systems earlier gear is really seductive. Obviously most of us following this blog site, we can stand aside and watch the new generation of camera buyers with a certain knowing smugness of just how much they are missing by not owning a film camera from the '70's.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

julianhiggs replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2019

Hi Bill, Its so true, I also shoot digital when I need/want to, but the direct simplicity of the OM series and particularly the OM 1 are where I feel most happy and satisfied with my photography. The old stuff really does connect with me in a way that a lot of modern stuff doesn't. Streaming music, mp3 tracks on a usb stick in my car, hybrid cars are a few examples of where I feel disconnected, but I'm happy to use them since that's the way things are going. As long as I have a manual camera and black and white film, I'm sorted for my authentic photo fix. :-)

Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *