Parco della musica e della cultura by dar.mar, su Flickr
The new Opera of Firenze (rear side), Italy
Super Angulon 90mm f/5.6FP4+
Parco della musica e della cultura by dar.mar, su Flickr
The new Opera of Firenze (rear side), Italy
Super Angulon 90mm f/5.6FP4+
The Lido by Andrew O'Neill, on Flickr
Efke 25, 8x10. Pyrocat-HD. Lodima. Amidol.
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/andy8x10
Flickr Site: https://www.flickr.com/photos/62974341@N02/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/andrew.oneill.artist/
Georgia Public Health Laboratory in Atlanta
This is my first architecture photograph w/ LF. I know the quality of the scan (iPhone photo of neg on light table, actually) is low, but thi sis my first LF image ever posted online, so I was in a bit of a hurry. Shot w/ a 90mm Super Angulon on a Calumet monorail, and developed at N-2 in Rodinal, no filters. I thought I had the camera back parallel to the building, but notice some convergence on the right side of the building and I had to clone out some weird stuff on the right (hopefully just artifacts of the light table scan!). Luckily, this one is about 1.5 miles from my house, so I will be returning. CC welcome & thanks for the chance to share.
Nice. What film did you use?
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/andy8x10
Flickr Site: https://www.flickr.com/photos/62974341@N02/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/andrew.oneill.artist/
Hey Andrew, if you were asking about the Georgia Public Health lab, I used HP5+x.
Original site of Baylor Independence women's college in Independence TX. Chamonix 045-F1, Caltar II 210mm lens, Portra 400.
Original site of Baylor women's college, Independence TX by Kenny Johnson, on Flickr
I don't post much.... Toyo 45A, Caltar 210mm F6.8 on Arista EDU 100
Growing Conservatory by Ashley Hoff, on Flickr
I love all the work on this page!
At my wife's work, the main university building where her office is located has a gold leaf covering made with gold from the Dahlonega area. The GA state capital is finished in the same type of covering. Interestingly, Dahlonega, as a gold rush town, was a major impetus to the Trail of Tears.
I've been thinking about a photograph of this building as the sun glints off of it in the late afternoon. The sun has to be just right and today wasn't quite it, but I did test the rig to shoot this using a very long lens. I used my Chamonix 45n1 with an extension bar and two tripods with my Nikkor 720mm f/16 telephoto, on FP4+ and with R25 and POL filters:
The sun highlights the steeple but you'll actually see the sundisc at the right time of day (may also be affected by the season). Gotta try again and likely will shoot color film.
Here's the rig. I modified the extension bracket (made by Vinny) by gluing in a tripod bushing to the front of it. Most of the weight of the camera+lens is on that tripod. The rear tripod just stabilizes the whole thing.
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