http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3549/...181a6cf5_o.jpg
Wisner 4x5 TF, APO Symmar MC 120mm f5.6, Tri-X, PMK Pyro, Pentax Spotmeter V
Printable View
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3549/...181a6cf5_o.jpg
Wisner 4x5 TF, APO Symmar MC 120mm f5.6, Tri-X, PMK Pyro, Pentax Spotmeter V
That is really nice!
Peter
Thanks. Another along the Columbia River's edge near Astoria, Oregon.
https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3528/...40ce3248_o.jpg
River's Edge by tuco, on Flickr
Wisner 4x5 TF, Super-Agulon 90mm f8 , ND0.9 filter, 320TXP
This sure is a large thread indeed! With my LF camera, the subject that I shoot least tends to be landscapes. These are three fairly recent images that I can contribute to this thread:
Hole in the mountain
http://fc01.deviantart.net/fs71/f/20...er-d45rrt9.jpg
(Ilford HP5+, Nikkor T*ED 360mm f/8, Linhof Technika V, 12x16in darkroom print)
Castes of botanical society
http://fc07.deviantart.net/fs71/f/20...er-d3gf3cz.jpg
(Ilford HP5+, S-K APO-Symmar 150mm f/5.6, Linhof Technika V, direct scan)
Two lonely pylons
http://fc09.deviantart.net/fs71/f/20...er-d45rtbe.jpg
(Ilford HP5+, Nikkor T*ED 500mm f/11, Linhof Technika V, direct scan)
I'm kind of interested in this topic of when center filters are needed and when they are not myself, out of a hypothetical interest in getting a shorter lens than 90mm eventually. I rarely wish for anything shorter than my 90mm Angulon on 4x5, but I want to use my rollfilm back more, mainly for color, and 6x7 could certainly use a wider lens as 90mm is pretty much a normal. I'm thinking it would be less needed as long as not much movement is used, as a lens that covers 4x5 is going to have minimal fall off in the 6x7 central part, but could be needed way more if rise or shift is used. Vignetting in the corners that is even can work with the image, as here, or be corrected in printing, or closely so, with careful edge burning, but that would be much more difficult with off center vignetting that might look like a fade to only one side, diagonal etc. depending on the movements used.
These are superb!
Very nice. I especially like the last one.
Thanks so much.
I was lucky to capture the moment. I was driving home from a days shooting and that scene unfolded when I came around a corner. The road is down on the valley floor. I took the nearest logging road I came upon to drive up the hill side for a better vantage point. I stopped at the first clearing that was half-way decent and set up my gear as fast as I could. It lasted long enough to get a couple of shots. But it seemed more amazing when I first saw it on the road.
Thanks
Tuco, both of your shots are fantastic, nice, well done!!!