View allAll Photos Tagged FujiProvia400X(RXP)
The grand train shed of Bristol Temple Meads lurks in the background behind this plain and simple telephone symbol.
Day 3: Before 7.
So if sinking sand wasn't enough my tripod handle got in the way and I didn't even notice. This was like a 4 sec. exposure frame, so that's definitely not my finger. Just because I forgot to resize it doesn't mean you can submit it as your own stock photo.
Around this time, a young couple was walking on the beach wondering what I was doing. They were going to try some beach yoga, before realizing that it's not what it's cracked up to be, and that a storm was coming in(it rained for about 36 hours afterward).
Paris in Vegas: The Eiffel Tower. Photographed with a Minolta MD 24mm/f2.8 lens on Fujifilm Provia 400X (RXP), Camera body: X-700
from Second Order Portrait Series
6x6
on Fuji Provia 400x RXP film,
developed in E-6
© AFFoto.de | Alireza Ferdowsi Photography
Day 3: On the way to the ferry.
Melvin. He was sitting outside the gas station wearing an authentic Soviet cap, and generic Marlboro mail order shirt. I asked him yes and no questions. He grunted only in the affirmative. I didn't get his name until we were both in line for the restroom.
He is one of two people on the Islands who had an accent that I couldn't cut through, even with my west African ear. It wasn't until we met a similar speaking fisherman on Ocracoke that I could understand what he told me in retrospect. He had a very thick presence.
#07 in my 100 Strangers project.
(ADV01) A quick snap with a tele lens, from the kitchen window; Storm clouds rolling in from the south west, sun setting in the west.
Angkok Wat 吳哥窟
most of the statues there don't have the heads anymore, this is one of the few that still has the head on.
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Fuji Provia 400X (RXP)
(ADV05)
Reliable sources tell me that Dahlia flowers are actually en vogue; The fuji provia 400x slide film likes this kind of colour and subject. I'm a sucker for water drops on flower petals, those lovely little light sparkles. And I had to check whether the dust in my macro lens was affecting images; Apparently it doesn't. So there, a photo of a flower. Yeah, yeah, cliché, blah blah.