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Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

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What a spooky, rainy day today; no chance for a cool pic, so you get a selfie.

 

Captured with my Nikon Df and a Micro Nikkor 60mm ƒ1:2.8 with a gray filter, post processed in Photoshop and Silver Efex Pro2.

Canadian Geese.

 

Digitized 35mm slide. Budding wildlife photographer way back then.

 

Crane Creek State Park, Port Clinton, Ottawa County, Ohio.

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

Shot with Polaroid IMAGE 2 on Color Spectra film.

 

Digitized with Epson V500 Scanner.

 

Luxembourg - confined

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

Press "L". Men collecting pure sulfur chunks in active crater. Dangerous, but their only income. Most don't even use masks working there every day.

 

Most of the sulfur goes into cream industry, to produce whitening cream for south Asian and African market where women highly desire it. While the European & North American women desire a browning cream. See the irony? Also those creams tend to be cancerous.

 

Pentax 67ii, SMC 45mm f4, Heliopan sh-pmc CPL, Lee GND 0.6 SE, Fujifilm Velvia 50 (RVP50), self-developed in Fuji Hunt Chrome 6X, IT8-calibrated & wet-mounted drumscan (scanned through PhotoMultiplier Tubes - PMTs - no CCD nor CMOS used in the light detection & digitizing process), no cropping.

 

...::: 4nalog :::...

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

  

• FransBouma/Jim2Point0 camera tools

• Reshade

Digitized with Fujifilm X-T3

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

PictionID:52729024 - Catalog:14_030121 - Title:GD/Astronautics Details: Launch Explosion - Filename:14_030121.tif - Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

 

Fuji GSW690iii | Fuji 65mm F5.6 | Kodak TriX 400

 

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2

  

I’m fairly new to the development of film negatives & positives/slides into digital format. If anyone has a process or articles etc. regarding digitization of film, I appreciate any feedback/input. So far Wolverine Digitizers transfer fairly well. Light Boxes (made to view slides) is another way in which you are able to take a “picture of the picture” with your digital camera. Appreciate all of your support & comments. ✌❤️…

On the left, an optical image from the Digitized Sky Survey shows Cygnus X-1, outlined in a red box. Cygnus X-1 is located near large active regions of star formation in the Milky Way, as seen in this image that spans some 700 light years across. An artist's illustration on the right depicts what astronomers think is happening within the Cygnus X-1 system. Cygnus X-1 is a so-called stellar-mass black hole, a class of black holes that comes from the collapse of a massive star. The black hole pulls material from a massive, blue companion star toward it. This material forms a disk (shown in red and orange) that rotates around the black hole before falling into it or being redirected away from the black hole in the form of powerful jets.

 

A trio of papers with data from radio, optical and X-ray telescopes, including NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, has revealed new details about the birth of this famous black hole that took place millions of years ago. Using X-ray data from Chandra, the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer, and the Advanced Satellite for Cosmology and Astrophysics, scientists were able to determine the spin of Cygnus X-1 with unprecedented accuracy, showing that the black hole is spinning at very close to its maximum rate. Its event horizon -- the point of no return for material falling towards a black hole -- is spinning around more than 800 times a second.

 

Using optical observations of the companion star and its motion around its unseen companion, the team also made the most precise determination ever for the mass of Cygnus X-1, of 14.8 times the mass of the Sun. It was likely to have been almost this massive at birth, because of lack of time for it to grow appreciably.

 

The researchers also announced that they have made the most accurate distance estimate yet of Cygnus X-1 using the National Radio Observatory's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA). The new distance is about 6,070 light years from Earth. This accurate distance was a crucial ingredient for making the precise mass and spin determinations.

 

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC; Optical: Digitized Sky Survey

 

Read entire caption/view more images: chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2011/cygx1/

 

Caption credit: Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

 

Read more about Chandra:

www.nasa.gov/chandra

 

p.s. You can see all of our Chandra photos in the Chandra Group in Flickr at: www.flickr.com/groups/chandranasa/ We'd love to have you as a member!

  

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These official NASA photographs are being made available for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photographs. The photographs may not be used in materials, advertisements, products, or promotions that in any way suggest approval or endorsement by NASA. All Images used must be credited. For information on usage rights please visit: www.nasa.gov/audience/formedia/features/MP_Photo_Guidelin...

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

Mexican woman. Original print was photographed/digitized using Sony RX100. Restored using CS5 and android photo apps.

Minolta Autocord

Chiyoko Rokkor 75mm f/3.5

Ilford SFX 200

Hoya R72

Adox Rodinal 1/25 6 mts 72*f

DsLr DiGiTiZeD

PS 2021

Digitized using the free transform in PS, then Topaz Glow

Digitized photo - This old barn has been gone for many years now - 2025 - reads See 7 states from Rock City

Digitized Slide from. Leica film camera

kodachrome slide

digitized w/ canon 600d

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

  

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.1

Pentax 67 105mm HP5

Digitizing project: European road trip, 1984

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

 

Pentax K1000 | Pentax | Kodak Porta 400

 

Digitized with Epson V550 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

  

Digitizing old negatives keeps bringing me joy

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

 

Yashika Mat 124 G | Kodak Tri X 400

 

Digitized with Epson V550 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0 | Lomography

 

Cinestill DF96

Date and Time (Digitized): 2009:01:24 12:35:53

Model: Miranda

 

MUA Jennifer Clark

 

© 2009 2022 Photo by Lloyd Thrap Photography for Halo Media Group

All works subject to applicable copyright laws. This intellectual property MAY NOT BE DOWNLOADED except by normal viewing process of the browser. The intellectual property may not be copied to another computer, transmitted , published, reproduced, stored, manipulated, projected, or altered in any way, including without limitation any digitization or synthesizing of the images, alone or with any other material, by use of computer or other electronic means or any other method or means now or hereafter known, without the written permission of Lloyd Thrap and payment of a fee or arrangement thereof.

 

No images are within Public Domain. Use of any image as the basis for another photographic concept or illustration is a violation of copyright.

Lloyd Thrap's Public Portfolio

 

B l a c k M a g i c

Leica M6TTL | Leica Summicron 50 f.2 V. | Ilford HP5+ 400 @ 250, -1 dev

 

Digitized with Canon EOS 6D | Lighttable | Digitazia

 

Home developed in Kodak TMax 1/4 | 20

 

Negative Lab Pro v2.2.0 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: None | LUT: None

Digitized images of past conductors and past performances scanned across the Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the L.A. Philharmonic .

It could be a cheap TV epic,

"Acclaim ! The Final Triumph !"

A badged Honda, the Triumph Acclaim was the last car to be sold as a Triumph.

Fuji RDP100 35mm slide film, Olympus OM2SP.

Standard consumer E6 chemicals, processed at home.

 

Digitized using a Nikon D7000 dslr, Nikkor 40mm lens, JJC ES-2 adapter.

IMAGE INFO

- George Dobner [Australian Army 2/4 Anti Malaria Control Unit] is 2nd from right of pic. The British soldier at right [with guard dog] is likely under command of the British officer at left.

- The Temple of Jupiter (Roman Heliopolis) was a colossal temple dedicated to the cult of Zeus, located in Heliopolis of Roman Phoenicia (Baalbeck of modern Lebanon). This is one of a number of massive "Lions Head" gargoyle water spouts that can be found around the temple ruins.

- Note the officer at the left of pic is holding another Kodak Brownie folding camera while the guard's dog (a British bull-terrier?) is making a meal of George's slouch hat! Note the guard has left his unattended military .303 rifle propped against the massive stone plinth at right of pic.

- The sheer scale of that massive plinth from the temple dwarfs the height of the men in the photo.

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SOURCE INFO

- Original image captured by my late father-in-law, Driver Tom Beazley of the Australian Army, 2/4 Anti Malaria Control Unit, 9th Division, 2nd Australian Imperial Force, using a folding Kodak Brownie camera with 120 roll film, while he was on extended leave.

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PROCESS INFO

- Digitized using a Canon Canoscan 8800F scanner.

- Restored from the badly grained, scratched & faded original, using Adobe Photoshop CS Windows (duo-tone version).

- Latest version re-processed using AI colourization, enlargement & enhancement software.

Digitized from slide. Central Coast California

Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0

  

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