View allAll Photos Tagged CrossProcessing,
Waiting the start of the women's 100m hurdles.
I took plenty of "action" photos at the recent NCAA track and field championship. But I decided to play around with some other things I shot to create this series: Scenes from a Track Meet. No real action, just bits and pieces of the event to give a sense of its whole.
I tried to give each of the photos a cross-processed look, too, just to give this a much different feel than the usual sports photography.
NOTE: This photo published online by Wired at www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/11/need-to-create-get-a-c....
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Lemon Balm... and a sorry
I'd like to say sorry for the lack of comments i'm leaving....well not leaving ...lately!
It's not an easy period first of all, then most of the chances i had to comment were during my spare time at work, but it seems they blocked flickr from work....cos or it doens't work at all....or it's all in a kind of text version and no html!
At home not really much time.....soooo sorry...i''ll try to catch up with all your great images asap!
This an altered zine - I took a commercially printed zine I made some time ago, removed the staples and added typewritten narrative text, washi end papers and then did a sewn binding. The images were made with a Borownie Bullseye camera on expired slide film that was processed by film acceleration followed by crossprocessing.
"Ricoh Caddy 35mm Half Frame Camera is a half-frame (24mm x 17mm) camera that is an all manual camera. Using a 25mm f/2.8 lens, the camera uses an uncoupled selenium meter (which despite being made in 1961) works perfectly. Using the meter is a two-step process, you’d first need to take a meter reading which will give you an EV number, from there you can manually set the aperture (f/2.8 to f/16) and shutter speed (Blub, ¼” to 1/250”) to match up that EV number. Of course you can just use Sunny-16 or guess the exposure. Despite the small size the camera has a good weight to it because it is a solid all-metal construction. Just make sure you don’t throw in a 36-exposure roll or you’ll have 72 frames on your hands."
Featured conversation on Film Photography Podcast #132
filmphotographyproject.com/podcast/2015/09/film-photograp...