squirtiesdad
The Woodpile, Recaptured
I posted an image of this woodpile, just off the trail in Miller Canyon, nearly a year ago, when it was draped in a blanket of light snow (see below). The new image above was taken with a different camera, different film, and different lighting, on the same overcast day on which I took the recent culvert image with the Ikonta. In the months which have elapsed between the two woodpile images, the canyon seems to have begun to recapture the woodpile, to absorb it noticeably back into its natural setting. The grass has grown taller between the logs, and the litterfall of leaves and twigs has grown deeper. From above, vines have begun to drape down from extended willow branches. Even Miller Creek, in the background, has contributed to the changes, its swollen waters adjusting its banks and depositing and removing sediment as it moves along past the pile.
Camera: Kiev 4 (1968, with Jupiter-8 50mm f/2 lens).
Film: 35mm 100 ISO Arista.edu Ultra, developed in Arista Liquid Developer for 6:30 minutes @ 70 degrees, and scanned with an Epson V600 scanner.
The Woodpile, Recaptured
I posted an image of this woodpile, just off the trail in Miller Canyon, nearly a year ago, when it was draped in a blanket of light snow (see below). The new image above was taken with a different camera, different film, and different lighting, on the same overcast day on which I took the recent culvert image with the Ikonta. In the months which have elapsed between the two woodpile images, the canyon seems to have begun to recapture the woodpile, to absorb it noticeably back into its natural setting. The grass has grown taller between the logs, and the litterfall of leaves and twigs has grown deeper. From above, vines have begun to drape down from extended willow branches. Even Miller Creek, in the background, has contributed to the changes, its swollen waters adjusting its banks and depositing and removing sediment as it moves along past the pile.
Camera: Kiev 4 (1968, with Jupiter-8 50mm f/2 lens).
Film: 35mm 100 ISO Arista.edu Ultra, developed in Arista Liquid Developer for 6:30 minutes @ 70 degrees, and scanned with an Epson V600 scanner.