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been having some problems with internal reflection on the 6x17 camera. you can see it here. a bit. tried some internal baffling... definitely need a lens hood that stops stray light to enter to begin with.

  

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Woodhouse Fish Co. in San Francisco, CA.

A monument in front of a building in the EUR district, in Rome.

 

Un monumento di fronte ad un edificio nel quartiere EUR a Roma.

The tower operator at Hillsboro is on the ground to give a westbound Santa Fe train a roll-by inspection in 1958.

 

Models and photography by Nathan Pierce of DeForest, Wisconsin.

Visit the HO scale NAPM club on-line at www.napmltd.com.

DIY flat black paint job and custom roof rack. A quiet moment enjoying the cars in my neighborhood.

 

First roll with my newly acquired Rolleiflex 2.8e.

 

@travislikesfilm

 

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Kodak Portra 400

Rolleiflex 2.8e Planar

 

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Unicolor C41 Home Development Kit

Epson Perfection v500

Processed With Darkroom

Roll Casket. Megaman fan art, done for the BRAWL contest over at Polycount.

Leica M6; Voigtländer Nokton 35mm 1.4; Ilford HP5+ @1600; Rodinal 1:100 Stand Dev. 60 min ; 20 °C

Polymer Clay beads, again with my favorite color palette: rainbow colors

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

crab meat wrapped in rice paper with veggies, teriyaki, and spicy sauce

 

Vancouver, BC

Just some of the names on the war memorial in my town

7DOS old Geometry Sunday

Karen, a female orangutan, shows no signs of slowing down at the San Diego Zoo

This ten-sided die (d10!) is going to casually remind all y'all that you gaming enthusiasts out there should go buy a bunch of books that are now on sale:

 

Night Stalkers: www.amazon.com/Hunter-Night-Stalkers-Vampire-Requiem/dp/1...

 

Spirit Slayers: (Er, for some reason it's not coming up on Amazon's site. Link later!)

 

Horror Recognition Guide: www.amazon.com/Hunter-Horror-Recognition-Guide-McFarland/...

 

Slasher: www.amazon.com/Slasher-World-Darkness-Chuck-Wendig/dp/158...

 

These are all books I developed with the help of a talented stable of writers.

 

So. Go. Buy.

 

Or I'll cry. And take a bat to your mailbox. And send you weird pictures featuring pixellated parts of my body.

I love the sound of the rocks as they roll about the sand when the tide rolls in and out. Deception Pass State Park with Deception Island in the background.

Detail of a well-baked dog with big chunks of salt and cumin.

Lunch!

 

A huge spider roll along with equally large Sake & Maguro sushi.

Rolled, saturated, and bagged.

"You have to believe in happiness,

Or happiness never comes ...

Ah, that's the reason a bird can sing -

On his darkest day he believes in Spring".

 

Douglas Malloch

An Arctic roll is a British dessert made of vanilla ice cream wrapped in a thin layer of sponge cake to form a roll, with a layer of raspberry flavoured sauce between the sponge and the ice cream. Wikipedia

 

© 2014 Tony Worrall

Pallets of sod arrived today... the final steps of a whole new landscape!

A FEW MORE FROM THE EXPIRED KODAK ROLL I FOUND A FEW WEEKS AGO. THIS IS FROM THE SECOND ROLL, I HAVE A FEELING THESE ARE FROM THE MID TO LATE 90’S. I HAVE NO IDEA WHERE THESE WERE TAKEN ALL I KNOW IS THAT IT IS SOMEWHERE IN NEW SOUTH WALES.

The Roll-rims I find are usually low and in shady places so overall look quite grungy perhaps befitting of this poisonous fungi. This specimen growing at angle on an old log on a slope, allowed me to see the underside and shoot upwards towards the light canopy with an LED light revealing the intricate underside and portraying a much brighter image that looks good enough to eat ;-). Focus bracketed in camera and blended in PS.

36/365

 

err, not much to say really except that liam would proberbly live on these things given half a chance!

 

ODC-roll

Bloom & Billet Mill, Scunthorpe

Heavy Section Mill roll turned at the BBM Roll Shop.

 

Lovely Chocolate Swiss Roll!

 

Flickr Lounge ~ Weekly Theme (Week 50) ... Holiday Baking ...

 

Stay Safe and Healthy Everyone!

 

Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!

Local celebrity who toured with the all the cool bands from the late 1960s - 1978. Wrote music - sang - played guitar. (wink) I'll see what I can do to get you on the cover of The Rolling Stone!!

"Roll 'dem bones" is a great song by Big Bill Bronzy. You can give it a listen here and see what the earliest "music videos" looked like (if you're my age, you used to watch them every Saturday morning).

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPre5xm99YQ

 

Collected Nevada casino dice.

DSC_4500

pinhole.

 

Worldwide Pinhole Photographers Day 2010

 

I've had a few folks recently ask me about the film I use for my medium format, black and whites. Kodak portra 160vc, usually. And before you say, "Isn't that a really saturated color film?" let me clarify.

 

I feel a little bit like I'm coming out of the closet. I've been unhappy with the tones that I've been getting from the b/w film that is readily available at a reasonable price. So the black and white film that I've been using the most is actually Adobe Lightroom. There I said it. I have mixed feelings about this. Sometimes I feel like I'm cheating because conversion to monochrome can include taking some liberties in toning the image (perhaps, in this shot, the tones in the sky serve as an obvious example of that). I know a lot of photographers take a lot of liberties with post processing. And I think the reason that I feel a little sheepish about confessing my conversions to monochrome is because I really respect the darkroom skills of many people I know. But I neither have, nor want, access to a darkroom at this time. I'm a bit nervous when I hear long time photographers tell me about the health problems (and even death) they have encountered through the years of working with chemicals. I LOVE film. But, ever since I shot my last roll of the discontinued and very expensive Rollei Orhto a few years back, I've not found a black and white film that really excites me. Ironically, as I was in the process of deciding to give up on lab processed black and white film, I received a MASSIVE donation of several hundred rolls of black and white 120 film. It's mostly Tri-X, Plus-X and T-Max. I know that there are other films out there that I could try and that perhaps it isn't worth giving up on black and white film entirely, but now that I've gotten into the groove of monochrome conversions on my own, I actually kind of prefer it. Now, when I shoot with black and white film, I feel like I'm giving up my ability to control my own process because I'm turning it over to a lab. I think my lab is awesome. Both Pro Photo and Blue Moon (Quick Stop) do quality work and I often breath easier knowing that one of these labs will be processing my photographs. My point is only that I've become more and more finicky and I just want to control tones on my own. Even if that means I do a worse job than someone else, or even if I do a less interesting job than a black and white film.

 

This image was shot on Fuji Velvia, which was generously donated to me after I ran out of film six shots into my day. I haven't used this film very much but from this day I can say that the colors this film produces are fantastic. Trust me. Thanks Donna!

 

Shot at Oaks Park with "the 'D' Team". Don, Donna, Danielle.

Yes, the title is a bad pun playing on the fact the three of them all had rolled up foam yoga mats under their arms. I can't resist a pun...

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