View allAll Photos Tagged HighContrast
Philadelphia, February 2020
enjoying the afternoon sunbeams
Camera: Mamiya 645 1000s
Lens: Sekor C 80mm f1.9
Film: Ektar
Taking a break along the corridor, this worker caught my attention with his purple vest against the whitewashed wall and eye-catching logo above him.
Mattatuck Trail, Warren, Connecticut.
I usually shoot both RAW and JPEG with my Ricoh GR II and the JPEGs are this high contrast black and white with grain. For the most part I use the JPEGs in Lightroom as a guide for my RAW processing.
This day I somehow had my camera set to make a single file, the high contrast JPEG file. So, these are straight out of the camera and a bit more contrasty and grainy than my usual. I like the images and decided to post them anyway. I have a few hundreds more I did a week later but have yet to process them all yet.
These were shot in a small streamlet that we crossed over with snowshoes. It was a fun day and this is a great new trail for us, very close to our house.
PinHolga pinhole image // Provia 100 film
Wishing all of you out there in Flickrland a happy Goat Friday!
Last year me and friends went for a trip to praque. I shot some photos there, but felt that they all looked way to much tourist-ish. Today I found this one of the castle of prague on my computer and finally got an idea how to process it to make it look more aestetical.
This is Bragi J. Ingibergsson, 45 and a pastor at VÃðistaðakirkja in Hafnarfjörður.
I had to shoot an environmental portrait for a school assignment so I decided to "kill two birds with one stone" and use that shot for my 7th week as well and Bragi was more than willing to model for me. He is a very nice guy, well probably has to be since he is a pastor but we probably spent more time talking about photography during this shoot than taking photos :)
Lit with a single bowens monolight with a 100x100cm softbox, opened the curtains on windows on either side of the altar to get some light in there and took this hand held, very minimal processing, pretty much just standard raw conversion stuff.
The LUMIX had its firmware updated today (v3.1) this adds a new style, Leica Monochrome. This now means I have a total of 8 monochrome ‘styles’ to choose from…I may have a problem