View allAll Photos Tagged AristaPremium400
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Mi galeria en Color www.flickr.com/photos/samycolor
Mi Galeria en B&N www.flickr.com/photos/samycollazo
Arista Premium 400 (Kodak Trix 400 Disfrazada)
Kodak D-76 1:1
Pentax K-1000
Pentax-M 50mm F:2.0
Lightroom 3
Silver Efex Pro 2
Epson Perfection V500 Scanner
Novice monks heading back to their living quarters. The monastery is one of the largest in the area, housing more than 200 monks, with multiple levels and steep steps.
And yes, I do find it adorable that this one kid is in sneakers instead of more traditional sandals or barefoot. (it was pretty cold at this time).
The dance continues out in a field. The Spiti Valley is a desert area in the Himalayas, high altitude and quite cold. I was out of breath just walking to this spot from the temple. Even though the dance was very slow and deliberate, the dancers & musicians looked exhausted.
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A traditional dance in Tibetan Buddhism featuring brightly-colored costumes and masks, performed by monks to bring blessings onto the community. I feel very lucky to have been nearby in Kaza on the day of this event, which also meant that there was a specially-scheduled bus to the village.
Aung Aung is my friend's brother-in-law, but we'd met awkwardly as strangers because my friend was back on the Thai border, rapidly making connections via mobile phone. I think there was a 12- or 14-year age difference between him and my friend's young sister, but their family was super sweet, with a second child on the way.
The day after our big group trip to the river, Aung Aung took me on a motorbike ride around the outskirts, explaining what he'd learned about the history of Tonzang as a bit of an outsider himself; he was also from Chin State but from a different part that spoke a different dialect.
When I had a surprisingly-frightening encounter with his high school friend who'd been conscripted into driving me to the next village--a guy he hadn't really spoken to in years--he immediately hopped on his motorbike and rode an hour through the mountains on unlit dirt roads without mobile service just to check on me. An absolute gem of a human being. So lucky to have made this short trip to explore a bit of Chin State.
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Mi galeria en Color www.flickr.com/photos/samycolor
Mi Nueva Galeria www.flickr.com/photos/scollazo/
Arista Premium 400
Kodak D-76 1:1
Zorki 4K
Industar 61 52mm F:2.8
Lightroom 3
Silver Efex Pro 2
Epson Perfection V500 Scanner
At least I learned something through months of precious photos turning out like this: expired/x-rayed film doesn't handle backlighting well, or at all. Unfortunate, as apparently I take more backlit shots than I realized!
Regretting not having enough color film...the whole old city is blue and beautiful.
Digital P&S shots: blue Jodhpur 1 and blue Jodhpur 2.
Questionable pun to go with questionable focus. I like it anyway. Nikon F3HP, Micro-Nikkor 105mm f/2.8, Arista Premium 400 (rebadged Kodak Tri-X), Rodinal 1:50.
Kodak Pony 135 (Model C)
Arista Premium 400 (Expired 2014)
Dec. 2019
Slightly cropped
Developed by the kind folks in the lab at Gene's Camera in South Bend, IN.
Regretting not having enough color film...the whole old city is blue and beautiful.
Digital P&S shots: blue Jodhpur 1 and blue Jodhpur 2.
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Shot on Arista Premium 400 at EI 400.
Black and white negative film in 35mm format.
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Large version at: emulsive.org/photography/35mm-format/16714
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Filed under: #35mmformat #Photography #2017May #35MmFormatFilm #AristaPremium400 #EI400 #EMULSIVEDailyPhoto #Kodak #KodakTriX400 #Nikon #Nikon28MmF2 #NikonFT3
When I first started traveling to Myanmar in 2008, Myeik in Tanintharyi Division was one of many places still requiring expensive, difficult-to-obtain permits from foreign tourists, as well as a flight into the town as foreigners weren't banned from riding the buses through certain areas. In 2013, this changed. I fully admit I mainly went there because it was something new; it took 3 buses and 36 hours of travel, and in truth it wasn't vastly unique.
Shot on the mystery film roll ... I developed this so long ago but didn't get around to scanning it, so I forgot what camera I shot this with.
Arista Premium 400 which I am sure I pushed probably to 1600 in this case because I got some pretty contrasty images.
Backside of my formerly-incredibly-cheap guesthouse in downtown Yangon, now double the price with only minimal structual improvements. Ah, the tourism boom. (Admittedly, this represents an increase from $4 to $9 for a fan room with shared bath, never intended to be fancy to begin with).
patrickjoust | flickr | tumblr | facebook | books
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Konica Hexar RF and Voigtlander Color-Skopar 21mm f/4
Arista Premium 400 developed in Xtol (1:1)
patrickjoust | flickr | tumblr | facebook | books
...
Konica Hexar RF and Voigtlander Color-Skopar 21mm f/4
Arista Premium 400 developed at 1600 in Xtol (1:1)
Originally from Afghanistan, Habib Nazarwal is a genius for languages. He interacts with customers in Spanish and Russian, his English is flawless, and naturally he speaks both Pashto and Dari; add Urdu, Farsi, Arabic, Hindi and Polish to the mix. This resourceful vendor turned his breakfast cart into an all-day cart a few years ago when both competition and costs rose. In addition to morning pastries and egg sandwiches, he now sells gyros, chicken on rice, and curries until the drunks go home--meanwhile, he's nearly vegan himself and raising his three children as vegetarians. He started vending in the mid-90s, when it was still possible to own a cart permit, albeit with a long wait. These days, due to the strict capacity set by the city, permits are rented on the black market for up to $25,000 for two years. Spared this massive cost, Habib has the option of changing his cart from standard coffee-cart commissary offerings to ones that reflect his healthier preferences; his concern would be finding enough like-minded customers.
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Hi friends! Are you on Instagram? If so, please follow me @nancyc_huang (www.instagram.com/nancyc_huang/) for photos that are about 95% different than what I post here on Flickr. I'm currently working on a long-term project on the stories of immigrant street food vendors in New York, and will be sharing a few of the photos I've posted there. I have a description & essay format on nancychuang.com/streetvendors.html , but I really hope you'll join me over on Instagram for newer images & continuing progress.
The dance continues out in a field. The Spiti Valley is a desert area in the Himalayas, high altitude and quite cold. I was out of breath just walking to this spot from the temple. Even though the dance was very slow and deliberate, the dancers & musicians looked exhausted.
------------------------
A traditional dance in Tibetan Buddhism featuring brightly-colored costumes and masks, performed by monks to bring blessings onto the community. I feel very lucky to have been nearby in Kaza on the day of this event, which also meant that there was a specially-scheduled bus to the village.
patrickjoust | flickr | tumblr | facebook | books
...
Konica Hexar RF and Voigtlander Color-Skopar 21mm f/4
Arista Premium 400 developed at 1600 in Xtol (1:1)
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Mi galeria en Color www.flickr.com/photos/samycolor
Mi Nueva Galeria www.flickr.com/photos/scollazo/
Arista Premium 400
Kodak D-76 1:1
Contax II (1937)
Jupiter 53mm F:2.0
Lightroom 3
Silver Efex Pro 2
Epson Perfection V500 Scanner
patrickjoust | flickr | tumblr | facebook | books
...
Konica Hexar RF and Voigtlander Color-Skopar 21mm f/4
Arista Premium 400 developed at 1600 in Xtol (1:1)
patrickjoust | flickr | tumblr | facebook | books
...
Bessa R3A and Voigtlander Color-Skopar 21mm f/4
Arista Premium 400 in Xtol (1:1)
Lining up to receive bowlfuls of mohinga. Every student has their own bowl--some hungry older students brought buckets--but not everyone has their own spoon.
A Chinese New Year donation from Borderline's advisor: mohinga, Burmese fish noodle soup. The Karen migrant school where it was distributed already receives three healthy meals per day from Help Without Frontiers, but it's Thai food, while mohinga is something familiar and loved.
A couple days after my first trip to the desert, another optimistically-romantic and even-younger dude wanted to take me to see some small dunes (the dunes-only shots turned out unphotographable with my crappy film). Small, because the big ones are touristy, and also the small ones were near his village. A very weird evening motorbike ride into the desert to drink terrible whiskey on the dunes, watch the sunset, and get eyeballed suspiciously by his family.
Maybe better in color, while the guy was wearing my turban from Mali that happened to match his t-shirt.