Cool.
Printable View
I would also say that it affords you a much wider field of view for a given focal length over smaller formats which can translate into greater detail for said equivalent field of view. Ie 75mm on 4x5 is equivalent in terms of field of view to a 21mm on a 35mm format. By default you have better resolution giving greater detail and larger image size for print.
Windmill & Fence East of Centerville (Goldendale) Washington
https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7846/...95bde8a6_h.jpgWIMI 071 Wmill 8"600:95 by Reinhold S., on Flickr
Neg# WIMI 071. K.B.Canham 8x20" camera, 335mm, O2 filter, HP5 film. 2000
More 8x20" examples here... https://www.flickr.com/photos/154287...57689659371185
Reinhold
Reinhold,
How did you get the sky to cooperate so beautifully?
Very nice work.
http://www.patrickjames.net/lff/2016-018-02-Edit.jpg
Polaroid 110B conversion, Schneider Symmar 135mm, HP5, Pyrocat-PC
There is a little white cross on the hill to the right. It makes the image, but you can just barely see it here.
I plan to ask others in the NGLFP group if they'd like to camp on Jekyll sometime in the summer. Normally Jekyll has been an add-on activity and getting there in the afternoon/evening sucks (sun is on the left but the forested area makes everything shadowed). My wife and I were actually staying in Savannah and so we got up at 5:30am to get out here just after sunrise, which was amazing. I want to camp for a few days...blow a dozen sheets every morning or so. Plenty of subjects to shoot as you know!
I found some old digital images and actually a few shots from my first TLR, a Yashica 124G, I shot back in 2013. I can tell how much I've grown.
https://stevemidgleyphotography.com/2017-03-29-0001.JPG
The Great Salt Lake from Promontory Point - Fujichrome Astia RAP