View allAll Photos Tagged Cross_Processing,
I've wanted to fool around with some cross-processed looks, so I dug this photo up from Seattle a few months ago. Justin Craperi everybody!
I had the privilege of being interviewed by Lomography!You can read the interview and see some photographs here:
www.lomography.com/magazine/lifestyle/2013/11/15/an-inter...
Fiddling with cross-processing in Photoshop a bit for later, proper usage. I like how this makes me look like a 90s folk singer who's put out a very sincere record.
my current portfolio. cross proccessed environmental portraits. shot with either a hasselblad or kiev 6x6 format camera. all of these are cross proccesed type C prints. no photoshop or anything digital.
On our Flickr Fest Berlin trip MAAV (Miguel Villa) had his Sony Ericsson camera with him and it wasn't working right. On the screen we got this cool image that looks like a cross processed film image. Every time he clicked the image he only got a black box. So his camera phone was "on the fritz". So I captured Johannes and Miguel by shooting a screen shot of the phone. Only us Flickr freaks would find this amusing... maybe a trip to the funny farm is forthcoming soon?
Camera: 1953 620 Kodak Brownie Model C
Film: Well expired Fujichrome Provia 1600
Cross Processed without push
*I always like little surprises like the fence post on the right between the sprockets.
© 2011 r-h-b photography - all rights reserved - many thanks for your visits and comments.
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© 2011 r-h-b photography - all rights reserved
Rolleicord
Expired Kodak E100G 120 film - Cross Processed in C-41
No Photoshopping
Exposure Adjustment in Lightroom
The red is from a light leak from the advancement window, and the lines are from when I was advancing the film.
Luca Bettarini Photography
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multiple exposures with a lomo LC-A 120 medium-format film camera. film: cross-processed expired kodak ektachrome EL 400. lab: iconLA, los angeles, ca. scan: epson V750. exif tags: lenstagger.
Cross-Processed Kodak Portra 40-0 in Cinestill Monobath B&W Developer. Original negative was very dense. Lots of grain with the monobath. I also developed other cross-processed negatives with HC-110 for much better results.
Henry County, Georgia
I was wandering around town the other night and came upon this colorful alley. I'll have to visit again. I don't think I did justice to it with any of the shots I took.
This is my favorite except for the AC units sitting down front. They need to be old beat up trash cans or something.
Jeff Clow's been pushing the Topaz application so I downloaded a trial version. I think this is one of my favorite shots of Cloudgate as it is not too over the top and might be worthy of a print. Check it out large.
Here are the steps taken to produce this shot:
1. Get up at about 5:30am in Chicago
2. Take a cab to Millennium Park
3. Set up your camera if you're carrying a tripod.
4. Wait for sunrise.
5. Politely ask rent-a-cop to move
6. Fire off as many shots as you can before it is time to go to your business meeting.
7. Archive your shots and save for inclement days (blizzard coming in Colorado)
8. Export into photoshop
9. Reduce noise using your application of choice.
10 Play with levels.
11. Run Topaz Adjust (I tried Psychedelic)
12. Realize that the preset is way over the top and fade down about 75%)
13. Bring back into Lightroom and run a cross process preset.
14. Play with the sliders until you like what you see.
15.. Export as jpg and upload.
16. Realize that was one hour of your life that you can't get back and that you probably should have went to the gym...
I developed Color Kodak Portra 400 film in HC-110 Black & White Developer. This developer worked very well.
Gardner Ro-Ho is an antique gardening tool.
Moon Moon-WillowStock
Smoke brush frozenstocks
Ocean Toranih-stock
Sky Mourge-stawk
Rocks venom-stock
Birds Selunia
Ship nobacks.com/