April 2008

shades of orange, on Velvia

Poppies from the california poppy reserve, also an abandoned Cadillac! First time trying velvia 50, the film looks beautiful! But as I I’ve read and been told, it’s not as easy to scan as less saturated color film.

velvia_01.jpg velvia_02.jpg velvia_03.jpg velvia_04.jpg

Cars
Film
Landscapes
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El Matador beach with Efke 8×10 positive paper

Quite an interesting thing, shooting the very slow speed paper with limited highlight/shadow range in broad daylight! It seemed to have worked though, better in some images than in others. Here are some scans that closely resemble the prints.

positive_paper_031.jpg positive_paper_04.jpg positive_paper_05.jpg positive_paper_06.jpg positive_paper_07.jpg

Landscapes
Paper
Photography

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Abandoned Cadillac

An abandoned Cadillac in our parking structure, have been meaning to shoot it for a while now, finally did this weekend! One 8×10, and two 4×10 shots projected onto the other 8×10 sheet. Used a cut dark slide to cover up the other 1/2 of the film, and vice versa for the second panorama shot. An interesting way to do panoramas, I can fit two of them on a single 8×10 sheet! The other panorama didn’t turn out as well.

caddy_01.jpg caddy_02.jpg

Cars
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spinning

taken with a speedgraphic 4×5, an interesting photo I think :-D

More photos from the speed coming soon!

speedgraphic_01.jpg

Film
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Efke positive paper

Here is something nifty, Efke makes a positive paper! http://www.freestylephoto.biz/sc_prod.php?pid=1000002925

Sticking normal photographic paper into a camera (may shoot pinhole cameras this way) and shooting the paper instead of film will give you a negative image on the paper. Well, this positive paper gives a positive image! A positive print straight from the camera! This could make pinhole cameras much more fun! Here’s my first test shot of my kitchen, on an 8×10 inch sheet of the Efke positive paper. Shot at ISO 6, developed in Dektol. The print came out very dark, so I’m going to try metering for a lower ISO next time to get a brighter image. I’ve brought up the brightness in the scan a bit so that the photograph can be seen better, but the actual print is darker, way to dark. More tests on this to come soon!

positive_paper_01.jpg

(edit) ok, here’s a better test! I did two identical exposures (this time at ISO1 instead of ISO6) that got my image much brighter now! I developed the first paper in Dektol at 1:3 dilution from working solution for 3 minutes. The second exposure I developed at 1:6 for 6 minutes. Both came out identical, very high contrast. I’ll have to see if there is something I can add to dektol to reduce the contrast, or maybe dilute it alot more than 1:6, if it will make any difference.

positive_paper_02.jpg

Equipment
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Poppies!!

I’ve never seen anything like this, so much color! No smell from the flowers at all, and no bees, butterflies, or other critters usually associated with flowers (accept for a few lady bugs). With the lack of smell and the super blue (and cloudless) sky, it was like a dream! I also shot some 4×5 Velvia 50, but in retrospect I think velvia will be way to saturated for these bright flowers! Heres some digital shots:

poppies_01.jpg poppies_02.jpg poppies_03.jpg poppies_04.jpg

Digital
Landscapes
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Charmlee Park 8x10s

8x10s from Charmlee Park meadow area.

charmlee_8x10_01.jpg charmlee_8x10_02.jpg charmlee_8x10_03.jpg

Film
Landscapes
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