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Chicago Great Western Railway F3 113A in Chicago, Illinois on October 31, 1965, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Built in February 1949 (c/n 5989) on EMD Order E963A, it became C&NW 113A after the July 1968 merger, and in 1971 it was renumbered 212 (2nd). This model is sometimes referred to as an F5 because it was built with F3 components but upgraded (D27B) traction motors, although EMD never had an F5 in their catalog. It was retired in June 1985, traded to EMD, and scrapped by Saint Louis Auto Shredding, Madison, Illinois.
Grand Trunk Western Railroad F3 9007 at Elsdon Yard in Chicago, Illinois on June 13, 1965, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Number 9007 was built in May 1948 ( c/n 5206 ).
Lindsay, Tenerife (hotel room with window light)
Hasselblad 500cm + my new Carl Zeiss Planar 100mm f3.5 CF lens + Ilford FP4 Plus 125
Developing - 1:3 Xtol, 12min at 26 degrees, Epson v800 scan (crop)
Chicago Great Western Railway F3 115C in Chicago, Illinois on August 20, 1966, Kodachrome by Chuck Zeiler. Built in February 1949 (c/n 5994) on EMD Order E963A for six F3A's. Sometime after July 1, 1968, it became C&NW 216. It is a Phase IV F3, utilizing the carbody the has become accepted as the F7 carbody, although from EMD's point of view, it is the improved F3 carbody carried over to the F7. The spotting difference is up on the roof: a Phase IV F3 has a pair of rectangular grid openings behind the cab for the dynamic brakes (if so equipped), and a Phase I F7 has a 36 inch fan.
Camera: Nikon F3
Film: Lomography Lomochrome Purple 35mm film. Shot at ISO200.
Lens: Nikkor 50mm f1.4
Scanner: Epson Perfection
V700. Scanned as negative.
Testing Fomapan 100 Classic and (semi-)stand development in Rodinal (APH-09)
Camera: Mamiya C220F Professional
Lens: Mamiya-Sekor 135mm F3.5 (Blue Dot) (yellow-green filter)
Exposure: 1/125 @ F/8
Film: Fomapan 100 Classic stand developed i Rodinal 1:100 (30' + 30')
The Takumar 200mm f3.5 and the Takumar 135mm f3.5, preset lenses. It's amazing the size difference between these two lenses. The 200mm is also a cut above optically, IMO.
If you're interested, I've posted a review of the 200mm on YouTube here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRnt7ibkhcY
Snapped with a Sigma 30mm f1.4.