Lomo, Photo – India on Film

109 responses to “Lomo, Photo – India on Film”

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thanks Missxooley. i hope all is well.

      1. missxooley Avatar

        yes thank you

  1. […] source This entry was posted in asia by poster. Bookmark the permalink. […]

  2. IshitaUnblogged Avatar

    Have you been using Instagram? As usual, amazingly interesting photographs of India. Love them:)

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thanks. No, they are old (2002) lomography shots. Real 35 mil film.

      1. IshitaUnblogged Avatar

        Wow! Actually we have got so used to digital photography that when we went to Nepal this time there were loads of Analogue studios, selling Kodak films and Fuji Films – all these seemed such a quaint concept.

        I’m glad that there are still huge communities who still click on analogue:)

      2. pinkybinks Avatar

        For sure! Film now seems retro. I do love it. Polaroid, 35mil and super 8. Digital has its place. Did you love Nepal?

      3. IshitaUnblogged Avatar

        Fantastic… Loved it is an understatement… the juxtaposition of both religious and spiritual aspects of Hinduism and Budhism – can’t get enough. Still a lot to write on Nepal. Now am in the streets of Kolkata! Just sending you a link – a few posts surrounding this post belong to Nepal! http://ishitaunblogged.com/2012/04/24/the-abandoned-women-amidst-many-prayers/

      4. pinkybinks Avatar

        Lucky you to be in India. How long do you intend to stay? Did you visit Gokarna in the south?

  3. Cheri Lucas Avatar

    Cool stuff — love the masking tape effect in particular!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      From the days i made physical photo albums!

  4. NotResponsibleAmy Avatar
    NotResponsibleAmy

    At least you make some attempt to extend the form. So much lomo these days is fake, tired, pretentious instagram

  5. candelacouture Avatar

    absolutely stunning photography!! keep up the good work, really
    if you can do you mind stopping by my blog, its really new and id love your feedback ๐Ÿ™‚
    Thanks so much and great posts!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thanks!! I shall deffo swing by.

  6. the nicepaper Avatar

    those photographs are really great. they really seem to capture an essence….very cool ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      I am pleased you enjoy! Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

      1. Anthropology Gallery Avatar

        You are very welcome!

  7. GG Avatar

    Very nice photos. I simply love the way you compose your shots.

    I have always wanted to go india.!!!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you GG. Go!!!!!!

  8. innamazing Avatar

    Beautiful shots! Truly amazing. Love your art. Also, congrats! You’re freshly pressed!
    Check out my blog if you wish, peace.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you, i will!

  9. ochie Avatar

    these are lovely! with the vibrancy of colours you can find in india, these lomo photographs look even more wonderful ๐Ÿ˜€ yay india!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      ๐Ÿ™‚ India rocks!!!

  10. paulworthingtonjr Avatar

    Beautiful pics, thanks for the treat and congrats on the Freshly Pressed.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar
  11. asoulwalker Avatar

    I love that last photo…

  12. asmallpiecedaniellemarshall Avatar
    asmallpiecedaniellemarshall

    These are gorgeous. I am fascinated with Indian culture; your pictures show a beautiful perspective!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Me too. Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

  13. ponky Avatar
    ponky

    beautiful photos, love them all ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you Ponky. Pinky ๐Ÿ™‚

  14. perpetualflaneur Avatar
    perpetualflaneur

    Wonderful work! I love that these photos are not orchestrated at all. Thank you for giving us a glimpse of India through your lomo-lens! Btw, What are the specs of the camera and film you used?

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you. Was 35mil and a free lomo camera, bottom of the range. The shots were taken over ten years ago.

      1. perpetualflaneur Avatar
        perpetualflaneur

        Great! Oh, the ten-year-old photos are truly a gem!

  15. annenieannenou Avatar

    Lovely and beautiful images! I really like the last shots and the 9th one (on the beach)!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you! So nice to share them after ten years in a book, on a shelf!

  16. simple name Avatar
    simple name

    This is a beautiful blog

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      I hope so. Thank you simple name.

  17. Patti Kuche Avatar

    I love the sense of fun, and adventure, in these shots!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Taken during my second six month period in India, during the early stages of our relationship. Mine and India’s that is.

  18. kiyahinslumber Avatar

    โค India, you'll find everything here! Well, almost.
    \\Old school photgraphy// ๐Ÿ˜€
    Congratulations on getting Freshly Pressed.

    more to see from India: http://adiyaalan.blogspot.in/
    ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thanks.Everything possible in India! Just checked out your blog, it’s great.

      1. kiyahinslumber Avatar

        oh, no no no! That’s not my blog. It’s a friend’s! He does all photography stuff and captures real good snaps. So I thought I’d share. ๐Ÿ™‚
        Mine is crazyexistence.wordpress.com
        sorry for the confusion.

      2. pinkybinks Avatar

        His work is strong. I shall check yours. Enjoy browsing pinkybinks.com. P ๐Ÿ™‚

      3. kiyahinslumber Avatar

        following keenly ๐Ÿ™‚

      4. pinkybinks Avatar

        I would recommend going backwards…lots of adventures of India, Burma and SE Asia. Lots of photography. ๐Ÿ™‚ Thanks again kiyahinslumber.

  19. Bhavini Avatar

    I’m disappointed. You seem to have captured nothing more than western cliches of the east.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Sorry to hear that. The shots were take over ten years ago when i was quite young and quite new to India. I have since spent rather a long time there and taken many more photographs, This is just one post that WordPress selected to publicize from several months of blogging.

    2. pinkybinks Avatar

      Hi Again Bhavini. I also forgot to mention that the post was as much about the quality of the image. The retro lomo, the time lapse, masking tape and the marks of age, as much as it was the content.

    3. pinkybinks Avatar

      Tries not to judge a banana by its peel???? Not in this case!! Your comment is rude and if you took time to look deeper you would see that. My blog has had more than a handful of views, actually almost 30,000. Could you explain how abstract shots of the sky, hands and electrical wires are “nothing more than western cliches of the east”??? Expectations create disappointment.

      1. Bhavini Avatar
        Bhavini

        I’m surprised you found my comment rude. I didn’t mean to.

        I did, however, wanted to convey my disappointment. It saddens me when photographers come to India from abroad and take notice of objects, colours, people or situations which have already been described to death in colonial narratives centuries ago: cows, sadhus, women in their native dresses, poor people, poor children, poor people or children smiling, brightly coloured dresses, turbans, temples. I feel this reductive, typical, different-from-west perspective is what often begins to become a rooted identity of India, for people not from India, who haven’t visited the east yet. It also confirms the stereotypical notions of people who have visited the east briefly.

        I would have really appreciated compositions which were different from what countless narratives have been informing the west of what the east is all about. Of course, the opposite also happens (although it would be wrong to mention it here, because the context is entirely different).

        The moment I saw your initial photographs, I was let down, so I didn’t bother to look at the others. I did, after your first comment. It made sense why such things would appeal to you 10 years ago, and I went on to explore your blog for other photographs. I liked the Banganga tank ones. I went on to look at your other pictures in this series, and I liked the under-exposed, orange-tint photo with the Ganesh poster, then two pictures below, the one with an electrical wire and a Shiva idol nestled on the bottom-right, and then the fourth picture below that, the one with the temple peak in the foreground and another temple peak and a snatch of an electrical pole in the back, and the photo below that, with the electrical wires in the sandy expanse. Now yes, these pictures also had stereotypes – gods, temples – but what made them break the stereotype was the fact that (I thought) they were beautifully composed. There was a subversion of some sort, a shifted perspective. That’s all I’m looking for in photographs, but you’d know, that’s it’s tougher, sometimes, to compose rather than to capture.

        I apologise for not looking through your other pictures. Shouldn’t have been in such a hurry. It doesn’t, however, disqualify my disappointment, but I know I can now explore your blog further and know that perhaps I might not be disappointed again.

        Sorry, also, for the wordiness.

    4. pinkybinks Avatar

      Hi. Thank you for your comment. It’s interesting to hear your perspective and understand why you made such a remark. I find it most interesting that tourists/travelers/photographers taking images of “objects, colours, people or situations, cows, sadhus, women in their native dresses, poor people, poor children, poor people or children smiling, brightly coloured dresses, turbans, temples” saddens you. ( what about elephants and street dogs? ) Your description is why many people come to India and how the country is marketed to an international audience.Tourists love that kind of thing, ( not poverty of course ) and in my opinion so do many of the Indian people who have ran over to me and said, ” One photo please”, poor or not. Taking photographs of the exotic cultural differences is not sad to many, it is what many photographers do, so i wonder if you could describe in more detail why this makes you sad? People know there is more to India than landscapes and people, but they help to make India great, rich, what it is. Cultural differences are a contributing factor for an interesting world and photography often celebrates this, like art does.
      Many of my photographs of India do not include traditional symbols like the ones you describe, I photographed the Sikkim earthquake last September but WordPress did not press it.

      People will always photograph India in a typical way, as long as the typical exists. Like New York’s iconic structures and Rome’s Vatican. People will always be predictable, but if they are passionate and loyal to their practice i support that.

      Thank you for your explanation and for taking the time to look deeper. Try harder not to judge a banana by its peel.

      Best wishes and peace,

      Pinky

  20. Juliana Moore Avatar

    Awesome pics! Love lomo ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Lomo love. Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

  21. Ravi Kumar Avatar

    beautiful pics…. Superb

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you Ravi ๐Ÿ™‚

  22. James Avatar

    you got some awesome photos here ๐Ÿ™‚ keep up the good work ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you James. I sure will!!

  23. trcapromo Avatar

    Nice mix of candid and abstract shots.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      India is both candid and abstract. Thank you for your comment.

  24. Carlie Chew Avatar
    Carlie Chew

    Beautiful pictures!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you so much ๐Ÿ™‚

  25. Bridget Avatar

    Forgot to say congratulations for being Freshly Pressed. It’s crazy, isn’t it? – one of mine was last week and I was blown away!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you Bridget. It is crazy! 1st time it happened i was in India with no computer apart from an internet cafe. The owner of the cafe made lots of cash that day!!
      Congratulations back at ya!

  26. theoriginalsung Avatar

    you’re rekindling my lomo passion…!! Maybe I’ll post some of my old lomo takes on my blog…thanks.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Fantastic!!! I will take a look when you do.

  27. khope99 Avatar

    Wow! I love your photographs, they are superb! I was planning to go to India someday, now I can’t wait!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      You MUST go! Thank you again.

  28. Blue Giraffe Images Avatar

    These are amazing. Great and creative way of presenting them for the blog too, great idea. You may have just inspired me ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you. Bring back the old school photo album!!! ๐Ÿ™‚

      1. Blue Giraffe Images Avatar

        ya know – there was something very tactile about it. Thats why I still believe in getting prints made. Technology has helped us in many ways but a small part is taken away. Props on keeping it up. Excited to see whats next.

      2. pinkybinks Avatar

        I am with you on prints. No idea what is next. Perhaps more of my recent work shot in Burma!!

      3. Blue Giraffe Images Avatar

        there is something about taking prints and arranging them to make another composition to take a picture of.

  29. eggswithketchup Avatar

    These are awesome pictures! They remind me of when I used to live in Delhi (:
    If you have time, I’d love for you to check out my blog.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you. I will make time to look at your blog, in fact i will do it right now!! ๐Ÿ™‚

  30. graphixextended Avatar
    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you for re-blogging my post!!! ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you so much!

  31. brainloess Avatar
    brainloess

    Love the photos! Where in India were they taken? I’m especially curious to know because ‘ll be studying in (and blogging about) India for the next few months.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      They were taken in Gokarna on the south west coast. A place i stayed for eleven months. Soooo peaceful. I will look forward to reading your posts about your time in the mother land. Good luck.

  32. Imaginarium of Pau Avatar

    Beautifully done album. Nice photos, great job! Congrats on being FPd. ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you so much. I will check out your blog ๐Ÿ™‚

  33. RandomSrc Avatar
    RandomSrc

    great job ๐Ÿ™‚ looking forward for more photos soon ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Yey!!!!! Thank you RandomSrc. I am grateful for your kind words ๐Ÿ™‚

  34. shovonc Avatar

    Funny thing. I live here, and I hardly ever notice any of that. Love the way you’ve put them up.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Cool. Read some of the comments!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you for looking and being nice!!!!!!!! ( see some comments!! )

  35. Diary Of A Phat Kat Avatar

    Yay! Congrats on being FP!!! I have loved your blog for some time and am glad you have been recognized ๐Ÿ™‚
    xo Kat

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Yey….Hi kat. I know you have and i am greatfull. yey for your support. I hope you are well x

    2. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you so much Kat ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚ ๐Ÿ™‚

  36. jbassal Avatar

    beautiful perspective

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      ๐Ÿ™‚ Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚

  37. niktasmits Avatar

    Lovely photo’s, I miss India!

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you. me also ๐Ÿ˜ฆ

  38. theoriginalsung Avatar

    As promised, I dug up some old Lomo shots. http://i-am-not-a-lawyer.com/2012/08/22/paint-my-sky-lomo/
    Time to wipe the dust off of the old lady! Thanks again for the motivation.

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Great to see them. What lomo did you use??

  39. hear me out Avatar
    hear me out

    I absolutely love the one with the women in yellow saris! i’m glad i came across your work, its simple yet beautiful.
    youre very lucky to have seen and travelled to so many colourful places ๐Ÿ™‚ love it.
    peace ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. pinkybinks Avatar

      Thank you for your comment and for checking my work out. Enjoy future posts. Pinky ๐Ÿ™‚

  40. afrisk Avatar

    If this isn’t the best way to inspire a journey to India, I don’t know what is! Incredible. These give such great detail. Duly inspired to continue with Lomography!

  41. afrisk Avatar

    P.S. I wrote a post recently about my first go with the Diana F+ (bit.ly/UNKarI), do you have any quick tips? I’d really appreciate any feedback!

    Cheers!

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