This is basically going to be a dual review of both the Nikon N80 and the Sigma Super Wide II 24mm/2.8 lens…
I like to call the Nikon N80 “The Camera Who Waited.”*

These beauties: Nikon N80 and Sigma Super Wide II
When I first became interested in photography, I used to thumb through the camera store ads in the backs of photography magazines. I could never afford any of the cameras listed in those ads, so it was like window shopping or daydreaming for me. One camera that I really REALLY wanted though was the Nikon N80. It cost hundreds of dollars, and all I could afford was a $50 Ricoh Singlex TLS. Now, all these years later, here is one more instance when I’ve benefited from the “demise” of film photography.** I have been able to obtain a camera I wanted, but which was out of reach for many years, at a price so low that it was downright obscene!
The reason I say this is “The Camera Who Waited” is because I bought the camera body in June 2013. I did not buy a lens for it until October 2013. Immediately, I began kicking myself for selling my N8008 with a 50mm/1.8 attached to it in 2012 – having that lens would have kept this camera from “waiting” so long! I did a lot of research as to the first lens I’d like to have for my N80 and bided my time until just the right one presented itself. I thought I’d skip buying another 50mm at the moment and go for my favorite wide angle focal length instead. I chose the Sigma Super Wide II 24mm/2.8 lens. I liked the results I’d seen from the lens around the internet and was intrigued by the len’s macro abilities.
About the Nikon N80:
It’s the fanciest film SLR I’ve ever owned, so there are lots of features I could detail here. There’s a whole series of custom settings you can dial in. One thing that I love and immediately turned on were on-demand grid lines. It’s an awesome feature for me, because I feel like I am bad at getting photos straight when using wide angle lenses (such as the 24mm I’m using on the N80.) Grid lines really help with that!
Roll #1 was expired Fuji Superia X-tra 400
Testing the macro on this TINY slice of a vegan mini pear pie I’d made. If you can fill the frame this much with a 24mm lens, you KNOW it truly focuses close up!
THIS! This right here. This shot made me say, “Yup. This lens is a keeper.”







Why all the photos of a tree stump? 1. Testing the Sigma’s macro abilities again 2. I didn’t know how else to document/convey the destruction our power company left behind when it gutted a section of my family’s property to put in power lines for a new neighbor. It was devastating to unexpectedly come home to this.
An impulse purchase the same week I got the Sigma Super Wide II

The mini pumpkin I painted back at Halloween. Pre-paint can been seen in my Konica Big Mini review.
My sister’s black and gold “ombre” mini pumpkin

Twig we used as a stir stick for paint my niece used on her pumpkin
Roll #2 was Kodak Gold 200

Christmas tree in one of the offices at work. Really close focus for a 24mm lens!
Normally these photos would have gotten a blog of their own, but as this roll was part of my testing the N80, here are some “bonus” photos from my Jobes-Shields family shoot at Christmas:
Ezra and some stuffed animals. Love the fox one!
I actually cropped this one because I thought it was cuter this way 🙂





Lionel, Lisa, and Rob (baby, mommy, and daddy)
(I know this one has motion blur, but I love it!)




I COULD NOT get enough of the “Lionel asleep with his bunny” photos!
Pretty cardinal ornament my mother had on her mantel at Christmas
Shiny new coffee maker for Christmas!
Riding to Pho Hoa Bihn with Mallory
Lovely, lovely tofu with pineapple at Pho Hoa Bihn
And those were the first two rolls with my Nikon N80 and Sigma Super Wide II lens!
Conclusion?
LOVE it. Love the camera. Love the lens. The Nikon N80 is the quietest SLR I’ve ever used. You can barely hear the shutter/mirror action at all! And the lens, while a little noisy itself, yields such beautiful results! I mentioned earlier in this post that 24mm is my favorite wide angle focal length. I’m also addicted to taking “details” shots, so having a wide angle lens with the ability to focus down to about 7 inches is a real winning combination for me. I can’t wait to further test both the N80 and the Sigma Super Wide II (and get MORE lenses for the camera!) I’m sold!
*This is a Doctor Who reference. If you get it, you get it.
**I say “demise” of film photography in jest. I and all the other film photographers are making out like bandits while people sell off their film gear cheap as chips! If you ever want to see how “alive” the film photography community is, just go search the hashtag #believeinfilm on Twitter!




My niece and my brother, 2004 (first roll with my XA!)
Avellino’s, 2004
Downtown Memphis, 2004
Graffiti in Memphis, 2004
My niece enjoying refreshment, 2004
My friend Alex, showing off a new tattoo, 2004 (cross-processed)
My friend Jason, 2004 (cross-processed)
My niece with my beta tester version of the Lomography Okotmat camera, 2004 (cross-processed)
For me (and for many reasons) this is the most perfect cross-processed photo I have ever taken, 2004
My friend Lydia, swinging my niece around and around, 2004 (cross-processed)


My niece in some sparkly dress-up shoes, 2004


My mom, brother, and niece on Mother’s Day 2005
River Records, Memphis, 2005
Ed’s Camera Shop, 2005 (I wish this place still existed 🙁 )
Saigon Le, 2005
Pie in the Sky table, Memphs, 2005
Book table at flea market, 2005
Home Grown Produce, 2005
“Lone,” Midtown Memphis, 2005
Midtown Memphis, 2005 (Hi there!)
Propane tanks, 2005
Downtown Memphis, 2005
Carnival games at Redbirds Stadium (AutoZone Park), 2005
Redbirds Game, 2005
Red lantern, 2006


Letter slot, Birmingham UK, 2006
Oxfam event outside the National Gallery, London 2006
Westminster Abbey – London 2006


Memphis Central Library, 2007
“The Local,” 2007

Cosmic Bowling at Bill Hardwick’s All Star Lanes, 2008
An Olympus XA skeptic, 2008
“Useless,”2009
Mom in my Memphis apartment, 2009
“Sputnik” Memphis, 2009
Water gun fight with my niece, 2009
The Orpheum Theatre, 2011
November 2011
Kat Gordon, Owner of Muddy’s Bake Shop, during a product shoot in her home, 2012
Easter weekend, 2012
Big Ben and Parliament, London 2012
At the River Thames, London 2012
Natural History Museum, London 2012
Natural History Museum, London 2012
Urban sent me the Konica Big Mini, a roll of film, and an awesome postcard of one of his photos
Mini pumpkins, before we painted them for Halloween

My niece decorating her pumpkin
Lunch with me mum


I don’t know why I always take pictures of dead birds. There’s one on
Trying to soothe a sore throat with a cup of tea one afternoon
I actually used +1.5 compensation for this, and it still came out quite underexposed
The angle on this looks kind of zany, but I kind of like it! (and probably a result of 

This must have been the day I was testing out my Keystone Everflash to see if it was still working (it was)
My sister’s wall decor
After we had a bit of ice fall in Memphis
Christmas pressies under the tree
Globe


Visiting Mallory. I love photographing all the cuteness in her house.
Hello, pretty little thing!
A really funny joke I was making about my 



Trying to move past my aversion to actually using the stash of expired film I’ve got in my fridge
Pumpkin pie bars I made for my family’s catering company
Pondering how I managed to get two knots in this ribbon wand when I was waved it as my friends left the reception of their wedding a couple of weeks earlier
Pecan pie bars I made for my family’s catering company (it’s a tough job being the desserts girl in the fam)

Vegan cupcakes I made for a catering job and for some friends
Strawberries of unknown origins on the door of my friend Clark’s apartment
What a rooftop patio looks like in the pouring rain
Very rainy day, very steep steps to Clark’s apartment
The prettiest tea I’ve ever seen, at Otherlands in Memphis
Vegan pumpkin biscuits I made. Why didn’t these happen sooner in my lifetime?
Sneak peek of something you’ll see more of soon: the day my mom got a tattoo!
Precious little vegan cupcake pies
More dessert I made for the family business: Mississippi mud cake!
So excited about the new camera bag that just arrived!

Vegan mini pear pies, in two different mini sizes!
A tiny slice of the aforementioned mini pear pie. So good!
Globules of milk and food colouring floating in oil – the result of making red velvet cake