I finally have my B/W process up, and it's really great to be working with it again. This is a recent shot from Wharton SF the morning after the remnants of the tropical storm went through. 210 Symmar-s, Tmax.
I finally have my B/W process up, and it's really great to be working with it again. This is a recent shot from Wharton SF the morning after the remnants of the tropical storm went through. 210 Symmar-s, Tmax.
Well, it is a landscape, though earlier it had been a sunrise. Wehman 8x10, Fuji A 360mm, Kodak E100VS, converted to B&W (cloud colors were just garish) and then split toning (overdone perhaps) in PS. Honest, I'm trying, maybe someday.
LJS
Daniel Buck - 3d VFX artist
3d work: DanielBuck.net
photography: 404Photography.net - BuckshotsBlog.com
Original color version, no PS, E100VS.
LJS
Mr. S,
I have to say that I like the b&w version much more. It's nice to see both versions to compare, though.
-Brian
Thanks Brian, I agree. Wouldn't have been able to do it without photoshop, much as it may offend my (very) limited sense of purity.
LJS
Another day in the Kansas Flint Hills with the 7x17.
Stars & Stripe Barn, Central California - Shot with 8x10 Deardorff, 240mm Rodenstock, f/45 @ 1/15 sec, ISO 100.
Great images folks...
This image is a new image from August, 2008.
A cattle rancher and his wife befriended me earlier this spring, while taking a dinner break at a local watering hole in Southwest Alberta, and during our discussion they kindly invited me back this summer to see their free range cattle ranch on horseback, so I could not resist...
Their ranch is just over 10K acres, where they are extremely proud of their property, along with their Black Angus cattle. I quickly discovered, while riding and discussing life in the country with them, that a great rivalry exists among the southwest Alberta ranchers, regarding the size of their ranch, the value of the land, and their prized cattle. I thoroughly enjoyed their western hospitality, their company, and the day immensely, but I did not enjoy my sore butt the next morning. I am such a green horn.
By chance, I captured a Chinook Arch forming over the foothills near the base of the mountains, while riding down one of the ranch's wide valleys in the late afternoon.
jim k
Free Range, Junction 533, Willow Valley, Alberta, Canada, 2008
Grove.
Chamonix 5×8", Schneider Repro-Claron 305mm, 5×8" Adox CHS 25, Rodinal.
Jiri Vasina
www.vasina.net
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