Summary of Photography Log Booklet 35mm 192 Exposures, by Richard W Jemmett
Unleash your creativity with the Photography Log Booklet by Richard W Jemmett! Track your 192 exposures with flair and nostalgia.
Sunday, September 28, 2025
Welcome to the wild and wonderfully niche world of the Photography Log Booklet! If you ever found yourself overwhelmed by the thrilling chaos of 35mm film photography and desperately needed a way to track your 192 exposures (because who doesn't?), then grab your favorite pen and read on, my fellow shutterbugs!
This log booklet-impressively for those in a teal-green world of pixels and filters-offers you a very practical solution: a handy-dandy place to jot down all those beauts you capture. No more guessing games about which roll of film captured that magical moment of your cat staring existentially out the window while contemplating life. Each booklet conveniently lays out tables of six exposures per page. That's right: six! Just enough to give you that little thrill of accomplishment while also contemplating your life choices and the fragility of film photography.
Here's the tea: this booklet includes space for eight rolls of 24 exposure film. That's a cool 192 exposures! Look at you, Mr. or Ms. Record Keeper! You can now keep track of every fleeting moment you capture, from the classic "Look Mom, I'm doing art!" selfies to those atmospheric shots of. well, whatever that random tree looks like in your neighborhood.
Now, you might be wondering what you'll do with this fancy booklet. Spoiler alert: use it to document your film adventures! You can log your film type, exposure settings, and notes about each shot, ensuring you won't forget the precious details when your friends ask about that photo of someone's foot you thought looked cool. (Tip: Don't include too many foot pics unless you want to become the unofficial foot photographer of your group.)
The booklet's dimensions are 5 x 8 inches-perfectly portable, because who wouldn't want to whip out a stylish logbook while their friends are shooting selfies with their smartphones? It's like a hipster's dream, reminding you of simpler, more complicated times when you had to actually wait for prints to come back from the lab.
In conclusion, if you find yourself in existential dread wondering how to chronicle your photographic journey while still maintaining an air of artistic flair, the Photography Log Booklet by Richard W Jemmett is here for you. So grab it, fill it with all those glossy film moments, and may your creative journey be as chaotic and wonderful as your ability to remember which film roll you're currently using!
Maddie Page
Classics, bestsellers, and guilty pleasures-none are safe from my sarcastic recaps. I turn heavy reads into lighthearted summaries you can actually enjoy. Warning: may cause random outbursts of laughter while pretending to study literature.