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No Way Fest 2008 Day Two: The Ladies, Logic Problem, Timebombs, Bad Antics, Dark Ages, Reprobates, Search and Destroy, Born Bad, Mad Men, Wasted Time, Citizens Patrol, Double Negative, Government Warning @ Alley Katz in Richmond, Virginia. June 2008
These were made by shooting a negative sandwiched between two pieces of glass. Different light sources and backgrounds produce very interesting effects while digitizing the content.
Taken with a Zenitar 16mm f2.8 Fisheye Lens mounted on a Olympus E420 DSLR. 16mm becomes approx 32mm as lens is Pentax mount M42 with an adapter to fit DSLR.
Jeffrey Baykal-Rollins,
Negative Aircraft (from the Iconostasis series), Charcoal, varnish and Japanese paper on canvas, 2012, 35” x 41”
Agriculturists from Thailand looking through tobacco leaves in a warehouse. Date from negative sleeve.
Date: 10/1/1960
Repository: Digital Collections of Joyner Library, East Carolina University
Persistent URL: http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/5106
So!
I found a way to get my film WITHOUT the use of a scanner, nice huh?
Yes, sorry for the grainyness though
And when I had it in color, it looked weird, so black and white.
This will work for now.
EE! So excited!
SIMILAR PHOTO, WALGREEN EXPOSURE: www.flickr.com/photos/thecoloremily/4245909932/in/photost...
This morning we went to the home of photography - Lacock Abbey. Whist there I had to recreate Fox Talbot's famous shot of the lattice window aka The Oriel Window. Thanks to modern technology I could shoot it on my DSLR then tweaked it to be about the right level of black and white using photoshop (as well as slightly warping the image to straighten up the windows). And then simply inverted the image to be a negative.
If I can get my hands on some frames and solution I might do some sun prints from this negative soon, that would be fun :) Please also see the positive in my photostream!
My brother looks at an old negative that I'm ready to scan. A cousin purchased a book of negatives years ago that date to around 1910-20, and I'm scanning them for him.
Another angle of the crossroads and grave with a negative finish
This is the famous Jay's grave on the crossroads near swallerton gate,Dartmoor, Devon (732799).
This is the sad story of Kitty Jay, who was a tenant farmer who fell in love with the landowner's son and, persuaded by his stories of love, marriage and a life of happiness, was seduced by him. When, after a long night of passion, she reminded him of his promises, he laughed at her, telling her he would never marry so lowly a person, especially one that would contemplate sex before marriage! Kitty went home and after a long day of inconsoluble sadness and hanged herself in her father's barn. Suicides were not allowed a christian burial and their spirits were feared by local folk. Kitty was therefore buried without ceremony at this crossroads, the hope being that her spirit, confused by the number of roads, would not wander and so would not be able to plague the neighbourhood.
Many years later a man wanting to know the truth of the story excavated the grave site and found that it did indeed contain the skeleton of a young woman. the man created the grave pictured above with a new headstone. There the story would have ended, but it is said that flowers are regularly placed on the grave by a ghostly hand and that those who stay at the crossroads at night to try to watch are driven away by perceived terrors before the flowers arrive. As you can see the ghostly hands have been very busy as there are numerous flowers in attendance.
I had this idea to scan some of my many APS negative canisters to digital. After trial and error I've worked out how to get the negative out of the canister. I have a Maplin negative scanner that I bought in 2012. It does not have a negative tray for this type of film but I've sussed out how to scan them in.
25.10.2020