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LotusEsp
21-Jan-2016, 04:37
I shared these over on LuLa and really doing this kind of stuff what what made me think about LF and getting detail
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Drew Wiley
21-Jan-2016, 10:10
The only problem with that idea is that when you do get that rich big print from large format, of a bitterly cold morning on a day when you're in the darkroom because it's still cold and wet outside, you kinda wish you'd printed an image of something tropical instead, so you'd subconsciously feel warmer! But yes, those
are lovely shots.

LotusEsp
21-Jan-2016, 11:16
you're not wrong. I remember waiting for the sunrise watching my coffee go solid and saw ice forming up the legs of my tripod before my eyes. It was like a scene from The Day after Tomorrow.

Drew Wiley
21-Jan-2016, 11:40
I used to barter large-format prints for various services. In one case it was an Optometry office. Since I've always done a lot of mountain photography, many
of my prints had snow and ice subjects in them, and such scenes hung in that office for almost thirty years. Probably good for checking eyesight too, since some
of these were very sharp Cibachrome prints. But then eventually the Optometrist's wife was getting bored as a housewife after the kids had all grown up, and wanted a job, so he had her become the receptionist. She got rid of all those pictures because they made her "feel cold", and replaced them with tropical scenes
with bright sunny colors.

hmf
23-Jan-2016, 06:53
Another potential problem is the tendency to do something safe and typical once you've gone to the trouble of setting up your large format camera and also considered the cost of film and processing. You know, like making sure that you've got detail in all the shadows, which would have destroyed the beautiful mystery of that second photograph. I know, because I've kicked myself black and blue over that ... more than once.
Enjoy what you've made. They're very nice.

Emil Schildt
23-Jan-2016, 14:57
aaah Prague...

Coming there (Again) in April...

Kirk Gittings
23-Jan-2016, 15:44
A few years ago in Taos NM we had a commercial shoot of a house for an architect in the dead of winter. I decided to do a pre-dawn twilight shot of the exterior. It was about 10 degrees outside and we were freezing. Taking the tripod out of my warm car and planting it in position in the snow in the dark we waited some 1/2 hour for the light to come up. When I went to move inside the tripod was stuck. I wrenched it loose and proceeded only too find that my spike/rubber tips had come off and were likely stuck deep in the snow. As we were on a tight schedule I decided to wait till later to retrieve them but we could never find them. I should have gone back in the spring but they were cheap to replace. Since then I have always put a small screw through the tip furl into the tripod leg to keep them secure.

photonsoup
23-Jan-2016, 20:47
A cold digital morning a few days ago here.
Just as I was leaving the sun broke out, only had time to grab a couple of digital snaps :(
http://theplumberbryan.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/BJS_3285.jpg
http://theplumberbryan.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/BJS_3286.jpg
Nikon d300 with a dirty sensor

r_a_feldman
10-Mar-2016, 13:07
October 2014, northwest of Chicago, first good frost of the year. I was out early with a bird watching group, but the scenery was better than the birds.

Bob

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