Take care! Don't let your obit read "He died doing a re-shoot."
Near-by hikers found Bob floating below Raymondskill Falls. His last words were, "How's that aura, Dora?" Friends and family are confused as his wife's name is not Dora and Bob was not a known Zappa fan.
His relatives were able recover Bob's film holders downstream. His last image he made before he plunged over Raymondskill Falls was unharmed and it was developed. Generally, the family felt he did a better job the first time.
Vaughn
Their name never made sense to me as they sell mostly photo products.
They host The Massive Development Chart.
http://www.digitaltruth.com/
Another source could be from IR's ability to 'see' more deeply into the surface of a subject. Skin is fairly transparent in IR, as you may notice from how blood veins are rendered. So some subject surfaces are rendered a little softer.
But mostly, it's going to be the halation.
Kirk - www.keyesphoto.com
The flaring effect is much more evident in the smaller formats due to due to the greater degree of enlargement generally employed.
I looked through my summer 2010 photos and found a few more... these done with Efke Aura.
Typical exposures around f16 @ 1sec w/ B&W 092 filter.
The truck f22 @ 4 sec w/ B&W 092.
Cheers. Bob G.
All natural images are analog. But the retina converts them to digital on their way to the brain.
The first one demonstrates the reflection of sunlight. Note how the sun reflected off the cross produces a halo. The second one shows some halation from the willow tree. The crop is from the branches on the left. The lack of a halation layer allows the light to bleed, creating a halo. I would not expose the film this way on LF, as I'd rather just get the "wood" effect and have everything ultra crisp.
Kodak HIE, 35mm, Nikon FTN, 50mm lens, 092 filter.
Last edited by Brian C. Miller; 11-Dec-2010 at 20:38. Reason: Found the negatives I wanted for the example
Bookmarks