Waiting for the light and the boat
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Waiting for the light and the boat
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Option 2
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
And the shots?
Lachlan.
You miss 100% of the shots you never take. -- Wayne Gretzky
Unsure which composition I enjoy more.
Txp320
Chamonix HS1
Fuji 120 CMW
9 min exposure (lee 25 red plus 10 big stopper)
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
:-)
...one of my very first LF shots
This photo may not technically belong in this sub forum, as the images were taken on my 4x5 with a 6x12 120 back, but set up portion pertains to this thread, so I thought I would share it.
Here's the photo, as I said, its a 6x12cm negative, so technically not large format. I don't have a scanner myself, so this is just a quick photo taken of the print with my phone.
It's nice enough, but not my favorite photo. It is part of one of my first school projects I used a view camera for. The assignment was simply "images with text." The purpose was to come up with brief captions or other words that went with the photo, But I don't like putting captions on my photos. I think it distracts from the actual image, so I decided to photograph signs instead, technically fulfilling the objective of "images with text."
And here are the photos of my taking the photo. These were taken by a family member sitting in the warm car while I froze myself in north western Massachusetts February.
There was a slope down from the road to the vantage point I took the photo from, and being New England winter, it was heavily iced. Getting down it wasn't hard, but getting back up proved challenging
(Does the forum scale down uploaded photos? my file is 3400x1650, but when I uploaded it it became 750x360)
Last edited by Ethan; 23-Aug-2019 at 17:52. Reason: quick question added
I made these at John Coffer’s all-around wet-plate workshop last week. This was my first foray into wet-plate photography. It was fun. The first is a 4x5 ambrotype on purple glass. The second is a 4x5 tintype. I was using a 4x5 Gundlach that belongs to John. I was so focused on the wet-plate process that I didn’t even pay attention to the lens, but I do remember that it was F4.5 wide open.
Cameron Cornell
Washington State
www.analogportraiture.com
Bookmarks