View allAll Photos Tagged Rome..-

So here we are, on the road again, and I hadn't sorted out the Sony A6000 to Snapseed interfaces.

 

I shoot RAW and my image transfers from this trip look meh. After 4 weeks it finally occurred to me to look at the file size. Lo and behold, thumbnail jpgs were transferred. Ugh.

 

This is why my cellphone images look sharp on Flickr and the A6000 images do not.

 

I tested shooting RAW + JPG and the good, full Rez JPG does transfer. Lesson learned.

 

Next thing is image processing.

 

I read about how Norman Seeff used to print high contrast works with a twist. He used a black stocking between the enlarger lens and paper to give a interesting softness to some of his images.

 

He wasn't by any means the only one to do this.

 

When I worked at Samy Cameras photo lab on Sunset Blvd in Hollyweird we used to do this at client request. It was really no big deal.

 

What was a bigger deal was our use of Agfa Portriga Rapid 111 Glossy paper. It gave a gorgeous deep walnut brown tone. We used this for may of the gallery shows we printed for various then famous photographers.

 

Taking the black stocking idea and borrowing tones from Portriga Rapid, it turns out, expresses pretty well how I feel about Rome.

 

So, here is a series of images done in an old, outdated, likely not very hip manner.

Rome, Italy, 2014

 

Only the street shots - thestreetzine.blo

Castel San Angelo

 

Rome, Lazio, Italy, July 2013

The grand brick walls leading up to the Palantino on the Palantine Hill in Rome. The size and scale of the structure can be seen by the tourists on two levels, this image was taken from the Roman Forum.

REGIONE LAZIO

 

Please take a moment to visit my website www.scorcio.it

forgotten something ??

Rome, September 2016

Christmas in Rome. One of the quieter sidestreets with an excellent restaurant.

Taken at 0741 Sunday morning before getting ready to go back to Stuttgart. Shot from our balcony at the Rome Cavalieri.

Rome (/roʊm/ ROHM; Italian: Roma Listeni[ˈroːma], Latin: Rōma) is the capital of Italy and a special comune (named Comune di Roma Capitale). Rome also serves as the capital of the Lazio region. With 2,874,558 residents in 1,285 km2 (496.1 sq mi),[1] it is also the country's most populated comune. It is the fourth-most populous city in the European Union by population within city limits. It is the centre of the Metropolitan City of Rome, which has a population of 4.3 million residents.[2] Rome is located in the central-western portion of the Italian Peninsula, within Lazio (Latium), along the shores of the Tiber. The Vatican City is an independent country inside the city boundaries of Rome, the only existing example of a country within a city: for this reason Rome has been often defined as capital of two states.[3][4]

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc ... Always very much appreciated !

Skyscrapers in Rome, ITALY

So here we are, on the road again, and I hadn't sorted out the Sony A6000 to Snapseed interfaces.

 

I shoot RAW and my image transfers from this trip look meh. After 4 weeks it finally occurred to me to look at the file size. Lo and behold, thumbnail jpgs were transferred. Ugh.

 

This is why my cellphone images look sharp on Flickr and the A6000 images do not.

 

I tested shooting RAW + JPG and the good, full Rez JPG does transfer. Lesson learned.

 

Next thing is image processing.

 

I read about how Norman Seeff used to print high contrast works with a twist. He used a black stocking between the enlarger lens and paper to give a interesting softness to some of his images.

 

He wasn't by any means the only one to do this.

 

When I worked at Samy Cameras photo lab on Sunset Blvd in Hollyweird we used to do this at client request. It was really no big deal.

 

What was a bigger deal was our use of Agfa Portriga Rapid 111 Glossy paper. It gave a gorgeous deep walnut brown tone. We used this for may of the gallery shows we printed for various then famous photographers.

 

Taking the black stocking idea and borrowing tones from Portriga Rapid, it turns out, expresses pretty well how I feel about Rome.

 

So, here is a series of images done in an old, outdated, likely not very hip manner.

Nikon D60 - AF-S NIKKOR 18-105 f3.5-5.6 ED VR

 

One-week schooltrip to Rome

These columns came out of the Temple to Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill. Repurposed, of course, by the church. As is the statue of Jupiter himself.

 

So here we are, on the road again, and I hadn't sorted out the Sony A6000 to Snapseed interfaces.

 

I shoot RAW and my image transfers from this trip look meh. After 4 weeks it finally occurred to me to look at the file size. Lo and behold, thumbnail jpgs were transferred. Ugh.

 

This is why my cellphone images look sharp on Flickr and the A6000 images do not.

 

I tested shooting RAW + JPG and the good, full Rez JPG does transfer. Lesson learned.

 

Next thing is image processing.

 

I read about how Norman Seeff used to print high contrast works with a twist. He used a black stocking between the enlarger lens and paper to give a interesting softness to some of his images.

 

He wasn't by any means the only one to do this.

 

When I worked at Samy Cameras photo lab on Sunset Blvd in Hollyweird we used to do this at client request. It was really no big deal.

 

What was a bigger deal was our use of Agfa Portriga Rapid 111 Glossy paper. It gave a gorgeous deep walnut brown tone. We used this for may of the gallery shows we printed for various then famous photographers.

 

Taking the black stocking idea and borrowing tones from Portriga Rapid, it turns out, expresses pretty well how I feel about Rome.

 

So, here is a series of images done in an old, outdated, likely not very hip manner.

Rome is city of fountains, forums and sculptures. You can see ruins of ancient civilizations and glory of Art here. If you see Rome once, you will never forget it.

I spent a few days in Rome in late September 2015. There were so many things to see with so much history. I couldn't quite get my head around the fact that so many of the structures were 500 to 1000 years old.

Images from around the City.

The Pantheon, one of the best-preserved of all Ancient Roman buildings, in large part because it has been in continuous use throughout its history.

Rome as seen through the Palazzo Barberini

Trastevere, Rome

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