A few moments after the sunset.
4x5 Adox CHS 25 ART, developed in Thornton's 2-bath.
A few moments after the sunset.
4x5 Adox CHS 25 ART, developed in Thornton's 2-bath.
Jukka Vuokko
Flickr
A very very white light house in Trondheim
Final patches of last winter’s snow, days before the arrival of this winter’s snow.
North Cascades, Washington.
Tachi 4x5
Fuji A 240mm/9
Ilford FP4+ (in HC-110)
Epson 4990/Epson Scan
Just another waterfall picture... My first with 4x5 though. I'm just really starting to enjoy what you all have been living for years! Sometime in the near future want to try some alternative printing...
Zone VI 4x5, Ilford HP5, Nikkor 210
hello guys ,
this one in the midday ,
Hello ,
location : france quiberon 56170 with google maps
velvia 8x10 with ssxl 150 mm
The ekta is much better than a file with 53 kb
Cheers
Runrig, sheep and whitecap spume. Loch of Rieff, 2009.
More fun with 4x10, but flipped (easy to do with a reduction back). This pond has appeared before in these pages, but it is always changing its "nature" (as is my erratically developing LF technique). Taken with a Canham 4x10 reduction back mounted on the Canham 8x10 Traditional Wood Field camera, first light through the Schneider 150/5.6 SSXL (a gem, to me a direct gift from the photo deities to make me more closely resemble a photographer) at f/22 and 1/4 second on cut down Kodak E100VS (desperately hoping to bring this emulsion back to life in 8x10 sheets, see Keith Canham's Kodak film page or an affiliated Canham dealer soon if interested in such an attempt. No more Velvia's dirty looks...). The 4x10 perspective seems to me a very interesting and illuminating way of looking at the world, vertically as well as the more traditional horizontal approach, and I am enjoying very much learning my way around it. The flexibility of orientation of the reduction back is a very nice feature not so easily implemented with a dedicated fixed horizontal 4x10 camera back. However, the forum image uploader, a horizontally biased beast, is not so happy with the vertical format, so my apologies if the size of the image is less than might be desired (by me, anyway).
Please enjoy, and all comments welcomed.
Larry
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