View allAll Photos Tagged 4x5
Focus is a bit off - thanks to chatty neighbor and dog collision, I had to recompose with a lot less sunlight.
Film: CatLabs X-Film 80
Camera: Burke and James 4x5 Commercial View
Lens: Schneider Symmar 180mm/5.6
Aperture: f/16
Shutter: 5.7 s
Developer: 1:1 D-76
is some 4x5 film! BTW, the one on the left is a Bausch & Lomb rapid rectilinear, on the upper right is the "Defender" rapid rectilinear for 6.5X8.5 inch on Argo Park, Rochester, N.Y. The one on the lower right is a B & L lens of unknown designation, all three mounted on Speed Graphic lens boards and ready to use.
LS45, 4x5 large format digital back mounted on Svedovsky 5x7 camera. kkeklyy modeling. San Jose, CA, USA. Carl Zeiss Jena DDR Tessar 4.5/ 250 mm. www.largesense.com
A canon overlooks the Devil's Den section on the Gettysburg National Battlefield from atop Little Round Top.
4x5 for 365 Project details: greggobst.photography/4x5-for-365
Technical details:
Busch Pressman Model D 4x5 large format press camera.
Graflex Optar 135mm F4.7 lens in a Graphex shutter.
Yellow # 8 series VI filter on lens.
Ilford FP4+ B&W film, shot at ISO 125.
Exposure was 1/8th second at F32.
Developed in Rodinal/Adox Adonal 1:50 dilution for 15 minutes @ 20 degrees Celsius in Mod54 daylight developing tank.
4x5" negative scanned with Epson V600.
My first Field 4x5 after selling my Sinar. The lens that it came with (not pictured) was an Astragon 135mm and it was a mess to begin with. It was my first antique and took me a while to notice the glass was cloudy, basically frosted. I unscrewed the whole thing and just wiped it clean with lens cleaner. A lot easier than I thought and images came out better than expected.
Pros: Love the weight, its like a feather. Handheld is totally possible (I have a linhof and my left bicep is finally catching up with my righty) The bellows is pristine.
Cons: Pulling the front standard out from the housing is weird. Its like two set s of train tracks with a half inch gap and its almost a guessing game to see if you can catch it or not.
Well I hope whoever has it now is enjoying it.
another shoot from my 4x5 red wood camera
lens: unbranded petzval
film: shanghai 100 pushed to 400
exp: 1 sec f4 nd8 filter on lens
dev: R09 1:50 21 min agit. 1 minut and 10 sec every min
contact print: fomabrom paper 2 sec 15watt bulb 1 meter from glass
light: huge softbox behind model and right , white umbrela in front subject cam left for fill
i try to push this film to 400 to see how it come out . negative is not this sharp and a little bit grainy.
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damiandphotos.tumblr.com/ - light diagraph
a re imagining of an earlier holga shot from the same position, but this time with a toyo 4x5 field camera
this seems to have been picked up by a Japanese blog: j-p-g.tumblr.com/post/263310026/4x5-plays-holga-via-print...
Handheld 4x5
Pacemaker Speed Graphic
152mm Ektar 4.5
Fujichrome Provia 100F
Grafmatic 45 back
My lab did an incredibly crappy job with these, they came back covered with dust and crap, and with blown highlights.
The detail of the water on this bird is what first attracted me to this scene, a bit difficult to zoom in with a 4x5 camera so here is a crop of the bird.
The detail despite the crop just blows me away.
hst diamond (tutorial by sew happy geek) for Danielle. 4x5 modern quilt bee, bee nr. 3 fall 2012
by zusjeb.blogspot.com
After wasting a couple of negatives, finally a decent 4x5. Calumet Cadet with Ilford HP5. Developer D76.
4x5 cyanotype on arches platine paper. Cragar race car at Owls Head Transportation Museum. Shot with fp4+ film, speed graphic 4x5, wollaston meniscus 190mm lens at f8. developed with pyrocat hd.
So, I made a camera. I had made a pinhole 4x5 camera previously that I wasn't happy with, so I gutted the pinhole/shutter mechanism and instead placed an old Ibsor lens and shutter I had picked up last year for $5 to the front. It's really old, and I'm pretty sure the shutter speeds are not accurate at all, but it seems to work. Amazingly, it produces images!
If you would like to request license options on my images please contact me directly.
and, because assholes exist...
© 2013 Bruce Couch & Bodie Group inc | all rights reserved | don't be a dick, do not use or blog, without explicit permission. I register my images with US Copyright Office and I can be your worst nightmare if you steal my images. Only assholes steal images. Don't be one.
8 panel stitch of 4x5 negative.
This is the same negative as the 4 panel stitch. Flickr doesn't seem to want me to upload full resolution images but you can still compare this to the 4 panel stitch and see the improvement. There is probably also some improvement from using the 80mm Rodenstock enlarging lens vs the 85mm Nikon picture taking lens. Not really sure how to evaluate that but the Rodenstock is optimized for a flat field at this image ratio.
You should also look at the image showing the detail from Lightroom.
Canon EOS M6 with 80mm Rodenstock Rodagon enlarging lens.
After having a snow forecast that promised only 3-6 inches of snow today, we ended up getting about 11 inches. This was the first of three such storms we are expecting this week. Have I mentioned how much I hate Winter this year ? I decided to take the 4x5 pinhole camera out in the backyard for a few shots about halfway through the storm. In retrospect it was probably a bad decision. When I would pull the dark slide it ended up becoming covered with falling snow and then I had to find a way to dry it off before I put it back in the film holder. I need to outfit the pinhole with a plastic rain/snow jacket and put a pocket in the back to hold the dark slide and keep it dry.
4x5 for 365 Project details: greggobst.photography/4x5-for-365
Camera: Home made 4x5 wooden and brass pinhole camera. 0.4mm diameter laser cut pinhole, 90mm focal length giving F225 aperture.
Lens: None. LOL
Film: Arista EDU 100 Ultra 100 ISO B&W Negative Film (Re-branded Fomapan), shot at ISO 64.
Exposure: 6 seconds.
Development: Self Developed in Kodak Xtol 1+2 dilution in Paterson Universal Tank using the Taco Method. 13 minutes @ 20 degrees Celsius. Kodak indicator stop bath. Ilford Rapid Fixer. Photo-Flo rinse.
Scanning: Negative scanned with Epson V600 in two scans and merged back together in PhotoShop since the V600 doesn't natively support 4x5 scans in one pass.