Stalagmatellite...
Stalagmatellite...
johnmsanderson, that's a wonderful effect.
My only niggle is that the repeat is a bit too obvious on the right hand side. For me, the clear spatial doubling detracts from the otherwise excellent feeling of superimposed activity and stroboscopic time. Easily cured by cropping just right of the wooden pole.
Stephane Couturier is a French photographer who has made wonderful multiple exposures in factories (on LF too). There's a fine balance between chaos and gesture that he gets just right.
thanks for the info. i didn't consider your niggle but it make sense. i'm going back to this location all the time for photos, i'm definitely going to try it again. It was only 2 exposures.
Couturier is good.
Another one from what I think was the same day.
Nobody ever made money paying attention to my niggles. Least of all me :-)
I like the puddles too. I think it was Siskind who said he always liked to include two objects in his abstracts - the viewers mind can't help but anthropomorphise the relationship between them.
Fuji Velvia 50 asa, 4x5"
L'Herbe, Cap Ferret, France (a small fisherman village)
www.christo.stankulov.com
I haven't shot B&W film in a long time so these were just for fun. MT2000 and 115 Grandagon-N on Tri-X.
One more, the Cabrini Green Townhouses. Some homes adjacent to these are still occupied. MT2000 and 115 Grandagon-N on Tri-X.
Last edited by Noah A; 2-Nov-2011 at 07:29. Reason: typo
A door in Ireland (probably Cork otherwise Gallway). Master Technika, Ektar 100.
Adrian
Last edited by Adrian Pybus; 3-Nov-2011 at 15:09. Reason: Added Camera info.
Looking towards Shinjuku, Tokyo.
Chamonix 045N-2
Fujinon A-240/9
Kodak Ektar 100
Bigger version available at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/36164047@N06/6293015734/
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