Sandy Hook, NJ. Overcast. Half speed blue, rated at 125. HC-110 B for 7 minutes.
Attachment 164425
For fun, comparison to FP4+ at 100% 2400 dpi V700 scan:
Attachment 164426
Printable View
Sandy Hook, NJ. Overcast. Half speed blue, rated at 125. HC-110 B for 7 minutes.
Attachment 164425
For fun, comparison to FP4+ at 100% 2400 dpi V700 scan:
Attachment 164426
That explains why instead of adding the recommended 5 stops for UV, I've been getting better results with 6. I've got more UV photos on the way. Have to develop them tomorrow and then I'll print on thurs.
This I shot at iso 400 on an overcast day, developed in 1+4 dektol for 5 minutes... Ektascan B/RA
I thought I had tmy2 in the holder but was wrong. Discovered what I had when I pulled the film out and felt the rounded corners in the dark.
It made a nice looking negative with useful midtones and the highlights and shadows are not extreme.
It's in the tree image sharing thread but it's nice results for Xray film worth me noting to try again.
Attachment 165014
https://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4158/3...0f5c86fa96.jpg
img695 by Jason Philbrook, on Flickr
JP that is a great effect with that unusual bokeh in the background, very 3d, what lens were you using, kind of reminds me of my Sigmar
It's the Kodak 305 portrait. It's crazy in the woods. I have a sigmar too, but it's longer and I needed something wider for my woods work.
Chewed through thread from where I left off a few years ago. Really nice images in here.
I made a spreadsheet culled from APUG, here, blogs, flickr, and google searches. It is a few years out of date. Meant to share this a long time ago but life gets in the way sometimes.
Find on my google docs - https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets...it?usp=sharing
It is set to anyone can edit.
EDIT:
It contains 4 tabs
1) name, EI/ISO ratings, sensitivity types, light exposed under (when given or obvious), and development info.
2) Film names, types, and box thumbs in an "equivalent" table. Discontinued films are also included
3) Notes, DIY developers with credit, Andrew O'Neil's X-Ray Film Reciprocity Effect chart (2010)
4) ANSI standard cut film sizes. in, mm, min/nom/max for 2" x 3" to 12" x 20" and 9cm x 12cm to 24cm x 30cm
Tri,
Looks like another great image. t is nice to occasionally see the location in which an image was made. Thanks for this. I assume this is in your back yard. What a great place for a photographer. I'm envious of both the garden and the image.
Jim Noel