View allAll Photos Tagged 39
So there is no listed times for Ilford Ortho+ and Adox FX-39 II, but using what I know from other photographers I went with the Ilford FP4+ time and dropped it by thirty seconds and you know the combination is amazing!
Canon EOS Elan 7 - Canon Lens EF 28mm 1:2.8 (Green-11) - Ilford Ortho+ @ ASA-80
Adox FX-39 II (1+9) 5:30 @ 20C
Scanner: Epson V700 + Silverfast 9 SE
Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC
Saturday 11th March 2023.
Camera: Zeiss Ikon Contaflex Super BC 35mm SLR (1966).
Lens: Carl Zeiss 50mm Tessar f/2.8.
Film: Kodak Ektar 100 35mm colour negative.
More information about the history of this particular car, which was raced by 1963 and 1965 Formula One world drivers champion Jim Clark during the 1966 Tasman Series, (including a race win at Warwick Farm) may be found at the following web page:
web.archive.org/web/20231027125413/https://www.motorclass...
Copyright 2023 Tasmania Film Photography
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Liquor, to the rescue, specifically Amaretto. It won't be the first time and it won't be the last.
Once again, thank you so much to the group, We're Here - such a busy day at work, but I was able to pull this off easily, plus I really love the effect! Caustics - something new for me.
1939 ford Deluxe.
Hogs N hot Rods car show.
Collinsville Oklahoma USA.
Sony SLT-A77MkII DT 16-50 f2.8SSM
39 meaning the number of stacked photos to make this final image.
I'm pretty sure it's the most photos I've used for a single stacked image so far (all still handheld).
Focus stacked using Zerene.
Abell 39 is a faint planetary nebula located in the constellation of Hercules. It is one of the most perfectly spherical planetary nebulae.
At the center is a hot stellar remnant that is evolving into a white dwarf. Interestingly, the star is slightly offset from the nebula's geometric center, possibly due to an asymmetric mass ejection during the star's final stages.
Coordinates
Right Ascension: 16h 27m
Declination: +27° 55′
Magnitude: ~13.7
Diameter: 11,000 years after its parent star shed its outer layers.
22 quadrillion miles away from Earth.
(22,000,000,000,000,000 miles)
(3,800 light-years)
Despite of my expectation, the weather was quite bad when I arrived to the famous Jokulsarlon in Iceland. Low clouds, iceberg entirely surrounded by the fog, rain and poor visibility (Basic icelandic weather so…). After waiting 2 hours, the visibility improved a little bit, with sometimes a very shy sunray to warm the place and create a foggy atmosphere at the surface around the floating iceberg
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Canon EOS 5D Mark III + EF24-105mm f/4L IS USM @28mm, 39s, ISO50, f/13 (Lee filter Bigstopper)