View allAll Photos Tagged Negative
No matter what it is, adults and children alike will use media, technology and new ideas in a negative way. Bullying will always exist. We control issues the best we can and adapt as individuals.
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0
Leica M3 | Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm f/2 ZM | Tri-X 400
Digitized with Epson Vuescan V550 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0 | Lomography
Ilford DDX
Vik scanned the negative strips from the Tale of Two Cities collaboration with teotwawki from way back. It's a roll I shot on my poor dead lomo lca on 200 ISO fuji superia at 400ISO - he shot over the top in Newcastle. The set of pictures scanned in individualy lives on his 'stream, here
Polaroid 195 Land Camera
FP100c
Gunky side stripped off black backing and scanned transparency on a EPSON V750
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Colors negatives can be great fun.
Make sure to use a motive that is easy to recognise - like this view over Berlin. Otherwise color negatives can be confusing.
If you have a software that allows you manipulate the tone curve, you can have a lot of fun.
Simply reversing it, renders a color negative, which you can enhance by using partial toning and changing the white balance.
The result is interesting, but still a bit muted (as was the picture itself, taken under less than optimal circumstances with regards to light).
This is from a series of old negatives found in an envelope in a box of photographs at a junk store in Dewey, Oklahoma. Some seem related, others do not. Most are damaged in some way and/or poorly executed in the camera and in the dark room. Many are over- exposed.
To try to make some sense of the group, all were scanned so that obscure details might be revealed.
To produce this negative space drawing I firstly applied a graphite background using a graphite stick, then using a rubber I erased the negative space around the figure and chair. By using negative space it helped train my eyes to look at the shapes surround the figure and chair rather than looking directly at the objects in front of me.