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Ogdensburg is a city in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States. The population was 11,128 at the 2010 census. In the late 18th century, European-American settlers named the community after American land owner and developer Samuel Ogden.
The City of Ogdensburg is at the northern border of New York at the mouth of the Oswegatchie River on the south bank of the St. Lawrence River. T
Another morning view of the marsh, Bald Head Island. Combination of two exposures, one for the clouds and another for the rest.
Pentax K-1
SMC Pentax 1:3.5 35mm
Iridient Developer
Affinity Photo
Camera - Lubitel 166B (120 film format)
Film - Ilford HP5 Plus 120 Black and White (ISO 400)
Developer - Lab-Box, CineStill Df96 Monobath
Scan - Epson Perfection V600 Photo
The sodium acetate developer produces the coolest image tone in Kallitype.
One or the other user may well have doubts about this. If the results are not as cool as expected, this is not due to the developer but to the workflow. A really cool tone is only maintained if the print does not come into contact with tap water before fixing. If the print is rinsed with tap water after the developer or the clearing bath, the image tone will be significantly warmer. It is not a question of which shade is perceived as more pleasant, but rather an advantage to know how to control the colourfulness.
For toning before fixing (platinum, palladium, gold), a rinse cycle is advisable in order not to change the property of the toner by introduced acid. For all tonings after fixing, a cooler initial print has the advantage of a higher maximum blackening. This is not decisive for successful toning, but differences in hue and saturation become apparent.
Left: developer, Citric acid clearing bath 1% (with demineralised water), ATS acidic fixer.
Right with a short rinse with tap water after the clearing bath,
Kallitype
Hahnemühle Platinum Rag, Potassium Citrate developer, ATS alkaline fixer:
untoned
MT10 Gold toner
MT3 Vario toner (thiourea)
Event: Capesthorne Hall Classic Car Show
Location: Capesthorne Hall, Macclesfield, Cheshire
Camera: Canon EOS 5
Lens(s): Canon EF 50mm f/1.4
Film: Kodak Vision3 50D
Shot ISO: 50
Light Meter: Camera
Lighting: Overcast
Mounting: Hand-held
Firing: Shutter button
Developer: Bellini C-41 Kit
Scanner: Epson V800
Post: Adobe Lightroom & Photoshop (dust removal)
May2025.
More agriculture along US-70 in Carlisle, Arkansas USA. FP4push400. FujicaST801.Fujinon100mmM42.
YellowFilter.Diafine3+3minutes.Wash:AGOFilmProcessor.
CameraScan:FujifilmXH1
Beginners in the technique of Kallitype often ask which developer they should choose.
Only a comparison of colour and tonal values with identical exposure time. To achieve the same level of blackness with the acetate developer, the exposure time would have to be slightly longer.
Bei Kogl, Gemeinde Sieghartskirchen
Pentax LX, smc Pentax-FA 1:1.8 31mm AL Limited, Asahi Pentax Y48(Y2) SMC yellow filter, f/6.7, 1/30
Ilford Pan F Plus film/Adox FX-39 II developer
Negative copied using Pentax K-1 with Schneider-Kreuznach Xenon-Zirconia 2.8/89-0001
Remnant from Sandy 13 years ago. Smartflex 3445, Kodak Anastigmat 7-1/2 inch f/4.5 lens, Kodak Tri-X 320 TXP, D-19 high contrast developer.
This is a bulk gas carrier and guess what. That is a gas power station in the backround
Shot from Portishead Quay as the BRO Developer approaches Avonmouth.
Day 260
Today it is Luke, Nicky and I. Thank you both for letting me take your photo.
Nicky is the one that got me involved in 365 in the first place!
Every time I come to San Francisco, there is some kind of smart-ass billboard along the highway ... "ask your developer," it says.
Ask her what? Whether Twilio is better than some other provider? Whether the cloud is here to stay? Who comes up with these crazy signs?
Fortunately, it doesn't matter very much ... by the time I come back again, this billboard will have been replaced by something else just as mysterious.
Note: I chose this as my "photo of the day" for Nov 21, 2015
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In early November 2015, I flew from New York to San Francisco to take a weekend street-photography workshop under the tutelage of Eric Kim. As you might expect, I took gazillions of photos; but not all of them were specifically associated with the workshop itself. On the way out to San Francisco, I took a bunch of pictures with my iPhone; and during the weekend, I took a number of photos that had little or nothing to do with street-photography per se.
I’ll upload the photos in dribs and drabs during the next several days, and let you decide which ones are sufficiently interesting to warrant a second look…
I've tested 9 programs for the purpose of processing challenging nightscapes and for preparing images for time-lapses.
The comprehensive review can be found on my blog here:
amazingsky.net/2023/01/01/testing-raw-developer-software-...
IN ENGLISH BELOW THE LINE
Foto feta amb una Kodak Retina IIa (016), fabricada el 1953; objectiu Rodenstock Heligon f2 / 50mm; Fomapan R100, revelat revers com a diapositiva amb quimics alternatius (HC110a com a revelador, clorur ferric i amoniac com a blanquejadors, i Iron Out com a reexposador-rerevelador-fixador).
La inmensa i complexa cimentera Uniland de Vallcarca, al Garraf. Abans tenia el seu propi port i estació de tren.
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Picture taken with a Kodak Retina IIa (016), made in 1953; Rodenstock Heligon f2 / 50mm lens; Fomapan R100 with reversal developing using alternative chemicals (HC110a as developer, ferric chloride and ammonia as bleach, and Iron Out as magical fogging-redeveloper-fixer).
Uniland Cement factory in the Garraf coast near Sitges, Catalonia. Once it had it's own harbour and train station, but now those are abandoned (not the factory).
Assif Melloul valley, central High Atlas mountains
Pentax MX, smc Pentax-M 1:2.8 100mm, Ilford HP5 film/ID-11 1+3 developer
Camera: Chamonix 8x20
Lens: Schneider 355mm G-Claron
Film: Kodak TXT (2003)
Developer: Pyrocat-MC
Development: Brush
Contact Print: Ilford Galerie G3
Print Developer: PF130
Toner: Selenium
Mamiya C330, Mamiya Sekor 105mm f/3.5 DS, Kentmere 100 @ISO 50, 38 minutes in Caffenol CL-CS @15-20°C, Zone Imaging Eco Zonefix.
My plans around Watford rapidly changed when I visited Cassiobury Park and discovered they were in the process of moving a few dinosaurs around. You know how it goes.
This was a grab shot through the car window before I parked up properly and shows a Triceratops, or at least a Homo sapiens interpretation of it, being transported in the park.
I now know that it forms part of 'Jurassic Encounters' which consists of around 50 automated dinosaurs that move their jaw and limbs and growl - it lasts from 2nd to 18th April 2022.
Despite the event name, the Triceratops did not roam the planet in the Jurassic era, coming much later in the Late Cretaceous period, and only existed about two million years prior to the Mass Extinction.
Cassiobury Park, Watford, Hertfordshire
28th March 2022
20220328 IMG_7817
We have finally released the Developer Kit for our mesh heads!
Please share your advertisements in our flickr group, so our customers can find you: www.flickr.com/groups/4144858@N23/
Rolleiflex 3.5E
Planar 75mm 3.5
Rolleinar 2
Kodak Tri-X @ 200 (developed as 800)
Developed in Rodinal 1:25
Scan from negative
# Camera: Olympus OM2n
# Film: Ilford XP2
# Scanner: Nikon Coolscan 5000ED with VueScan Software
# Edited with Iridient Developer
As promised since our update to the Venus, Isis and Freya bodies are now complete and our developer kits have been updated we will now reopen our applications to apply to be a Belleza Mesh Creator....
Details on our blog: BELLEZA MESH CREATOR APPLICATION & AGREEMENT – NOW OPEN!
Future is now.
Carl Zeiss Jena Sonnar 1:2 f=5cm (collapsible)
Kiev 4M
ORWO N75 @ 400ISO
Ilford ID11 Stock (9min 30sec)
Fort Custer Recreation Area near Augusta, Michigan. January 9, 2016.
Pentax Mz-S
FA 28-105 f4-5.6
Kentmere 400 rated @400
Tmax developer 1+4, 6min @ 20c
Toned image from scanned B&W exposure. My first experiment with Tmax developer and K400.
16-00575_tu6
coffee lovers, Sydney 2018. Olympus XA4 Zuiko 28mm f/3.5 macro, Kodak TMAX P3200 @ ISO1600 in TMAX developer. V700 scan.
UN 54 film developed in PMK developer. This developer is a bit different as it really enhances the greyscale
1/6
Developer: Ilford Ilfotec 3 (1+9)
Time 6.30 mins at 20 C
Fixer: Ilford Rapid Fixer (1+5)
Time: 5 mins at 20 C
Ilford Wetting Agent
Scanner: Agfa afs-100 Scanner
Memory Card: Sandisk SDHC UHS-I 16 GB Card
Sunny Isles Beach (SIB, officially City of Sunny Isles Beach) is a city located on a barrier island in northeast Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States. The city is bounded by the Atlantic Ocean on the east and the Intracoastal Waterway on the west.
Sunny Isles Beach is an area of cultural diversity with stores lining Collins Avenue, the main thoroughfare through the city.
It is a growing resort area and developers such as Michael Dezer have invested heavily in construction of high-rise hotels and condominiums while licensing the Donald Trump name for some of the buildings for promotional purposes. Sunny Isles Beach has a central location, minutes from Bal Harbour to the south, and Aventura to the north and west.
Sunny Isles Beach was also the 2008 site of MTV's annual "Spring Break" celebration, with headquarters at the local Newport Beachside Resort.
In 1920, Harvey Baker Graves, a private investor, purchased a 2.26-square-mile (5.9 km2) tract of land for development as a tourist resort. He named it Sunny Isles -- The Venice of America.
When the Haulover bridge was completed in 1925, the area became accessible from Miami Beach, attracting developers who widened streams, dug canals and inlets and created islands and peninsulas for building waterfront properties on Biscayne Bay.
In the 1920s, Carl G. Fisher built an all-wooden racetrack with stands for 12,000 spectators, known as the Fulford-Miami Speedway. This event, held on February 22, 1926, dubbed "Carl G. Fisher Cup Race," was a forerunner to the auto races at Sebring and Daytona. In September 1926, after just one race, the track was destroyed by the 1926 Miami Hurricane. This event was held in Fulford-By-the-Sea which is today's North Miami Beach. Sunny Isles Beach was known as North Miami Beach until 1931, then known as Sunny Isles until 1997.
In 1936, Milwaukee malt magnate Kurtis Froedtert bought Sunny Isles. The Sunny Isles Pier was built and soon became a popular destination. Sunny Isles developed slowly until the 1950s when the first single-family homes were built in the Golden Shores area. During the 1950s and 1960s more than 30 motels sprang up along Collins Avenue including the Ocean Palm, the first two-story motel in the U.S. Designed by Norman Giller in 1948 it was developed and owned by the Gingold family for the next 45 years and provided the springboard for Sunny Isles economic development. Tourists came from all over to vacation in themed motels of exotic design along "Motel Row". One motel, The Fountainhead, was so named by its owner, Norman Giller, after the novel by Ayn Rand. As of 2013, the Ocean Palm Motel is closed.[citation needed
In 1982 the half-mile-long Sunny Isles Pier was designated a historic site. In the early-mid 80s, it went through restoration and re-opened to the public in 1986. The pier was severely damaged in October 2005 by Hurricane Wilma. After 8 years, it was remodeled and reopened as Newport Fishing Pier on June 15, 2013.
In 1997, the citizens of the area voted to incorporate as a municipality. Sunny Isles was renamed Sunny Isles Beach. Sunny Isles Beach began major redevelopment during the real estate boom of the early 2000s with mostly luxury high-rise condominiums and some hotels under construction along the beach side of Collins Avenue (A1A) replacing most of the historic one- and two-story motels along Motel Row. In 2011, construction began on two more high-rises, Regalia, located on the northern border of the city along A1A, and The Mansions at Acqualina, located adjacent to the Acqualina Resort & Spa on the Beach.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website: