View allAll Photos Tagged Cross_Processing,
nikon FA
fujichrome sensia 100 RA-687, rated at 200 iso, cross-processed normally at box speed
April, 12th. 2015.
processed and scanned at Nation Photo, Paris
nikkor AI-s 18mm f/3.5
The scan of this print did not work as well as I wanted it to but this is one of my fav landscape pics, taken from the dirt road running behind the Langeberg Mountains, past Tradouw towards Heidelberg. The "sheep" on the hill are actually rocks; the colours are all distorted because of the cross processing.
~ Scan of print taken with an old Canon SLR (cross process film)
This is Heather. She's a bicyclist, bacontarian, and made fun of me for saying she looked like a borg in a shot (I misspoke, too. What I meant to say was that she looked like she was being disintegrated by the daleks. Silly me)
Totally one of the more pleasant to work with models I've ever worked with. See, from outside, you might think that the best models are the ones with the biggest boobs or skinniest waistline. But it's really about being cooperative and evocative and such.
I barely have enough room downstairs to fit a person in the focusing and frame size of Joy's 360mm lens.
Strobist details: White background paper, Vivitar 285HV triggered off of a FlashZebra optical slave, Sunpak 622 with zoom head at wide above her and to the left, optically triggered. Sunpak 622 with plain head to the right, cable triggered. All bare heads.
We have a few wind chimes in the back garden, glass ones of a butterfly and dragonfly. I wanted to see what they looked like in the morning light and played around with the saturation and vibrancy.
i love images that are cross processed.i tried myself digitaly to imitate cross processing using photoshop i am well happy with the results let me know what you think
nikon FA
fujichrome sensia 100 RA-687, rated at 200 iso, cross-processed normally at box speed
April, 12th. 2015.
processed and scanned at Nation Photo, Paris
nikkor AI-s 18mm f/3.5
180 degree each panorama - pics taken on my half frame camera (before I dropped and broke it) - it took 2 pics onto the same negative - put together in photoshop. Best large!
Shoot with Large Format Camera, 10x12 color slide film,
iso 1,
cross process,
color filtering in shooting,
E6 hand developed N-2,
application of the ZONE SYSTEM
branches in a winter woodland with a cross-processed film effect: sample image from our 'arbor' design pack
Click here to see where this photo was taken. By courtesy of BeeLoop SL (the Mapware & Mobility Solutions Company).
Try for a redder look:
www.biscaclothing.com/news/2006/07/cross_processing_in_ph...
or for a greener look:
You can cross process the background to fade it, to make the figure look prominent. The corrected tutorial is here : photoshopper27.blogspot.com/2010/12/cross-processing-back...
I don't know what Nat's character is called so I titled this based on what I did to the photo. I used Topaz Adjust's Dark - Night faded to 65% on the Overlay mode and Nik Software's Color Efex Pro - Pro Contrast / Cross-Processing & Film Grain filters. Light pattern created with MagMod's MagBeam with stencil.
Cosplayer: Nat Archaic
No color modification was done to this image.
Cross Processed (XPRO) Fuji Sensia 100 ISO Color Slide 35mm Film. Shot with the Nikon N8008s, scanned using the Epson V600. I processed this film using C-41 at Costco. Some places refuse to cross process, just find someone who will. It'll be fine...
This is from my first roll of cross processed film. I've never done this before, and I'm really pleased with some of the results. Now that I know a little more about what's going on, I may shoot a little more when I find cheap slide film to play with.
Also, I shot this roll as if it was 200 ISO film, over exposing it slightly.
An eery silhouette. Also made this into black and white.
Read my cross processing adventures here: www.flickr.com/groups/1535149@N22/discuss/72157628109340933/
University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa, Honolulu.
Lubitel 2 TLR med-format camera, expired Fujichrome 64T tungsten film, overexposed one-stop, cross processed.