View allAll Photos Tagged VueScan

First scan at home attempt.

Zorki C

Kodak T-Max 400 pushed to 800

Epson v500

Vuescan + Darktable

   

500cm, 50mm f4 Zeiss Distagon Chrome C version, Portra 160, Plustek 120, Vuescan

My neighbourhood is one big construction yard, at the moment, old heating pipes are being replaced, and these road signs are, obviously, taking a pause.

 

Taken with Minolta Dynax 7000i film camera and Minolta AF Zoom 28‍–‍80mm F3.5‍–‍5.6 D kit lens, on AgfaPhoto APX 400 black & white film.

Developed in Adox Adonal, 1+50 dilution, at 22°C.

Scanned with Plustek OpticFilm 8100 film scanner, using VueScan.

Kiev 19, Nikon Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 AI-S Pancake, Rollei RPX400, Adox Adonal 2:50 21 Min., Vuescan, Reflecta CrystalScan 3600, GIMP

 

Development details on FilmDev

Commuter reading a novel while waiting for his train at Toronto's Lawrence West Subway Station.

 

(He's reading "Fifth Business" (1970), a novel by Canadian writer Robertson Davies.)

 

Leica M2

Summicron 50mm f/2 v2

Tri-X, Rodinal 1:50

Nikon Super Coolscan 8000ED

VueScan

 

View On White

 

► All my images are my own real photography, not fake AI fraudography.

 

Please don't use my images for any purpose, including on websites or blogs, without my explicit permission.

 

S.V.P ne pas utiliser cette photo sur un site web, blog ou tout autre média sans ma permission explicite.

 

© Tom Freda / All rights reserved - Tous droits réservés

 

Website I 500px l Facebook l Instagram l Grainery

Contax II; Sonnar 135mm f4; Fuji Superia 400 ±0, Developed at Photo Ueno, Tokyo; Driver: VueScan 9 (DNG duplication); Scanner: Plustek Optikfilm 82001 Ai; Raw Editor: Capture One Pro 20 (positive conversion and retouch); Browser: Photo Mechanic 6(selection, management and uploading)

Analog Times

#Steam engine

#Steam locomotive

 

#KodakGold200

 

#MinoltaXD5

#MinoltaMD35-70f/3.5

Mid-res scan

Vuescan

Plustek 7500i

Leica IIIf + Industar10 50mmF3.5

/ Kodak Tri-X : selfdeveloping Rodinal high temp.

: vuescan + lightroom3

**Please excuse the typo in the caption

 

Kodak Panoram No. 1

Ilford PanF+ / HC110

Epson V500 / Vuescan / Colorperfect / Photoshop

Voigtländer Bessamatic, Color Lanthar 50mm/2.8, Agfaphoto Vista Plus 200, Tetenal Colortec C-41 - 30 Grad, Vuescan, Reflecta CrystalScan 3600, GIMP

Flexaret IV / Kodak Ektar100

; vuescan+GT-X970

 

labo development

KODAK T-MAX 400 TMY 120 + Developer Kodak XTOL + Rolleiflex 2.8D Schneider Xenotar 2,8 / 80mm + Nikon COOLSCAN 8000 ED (Vuescan RAW DNG) fotoplenka.in.ua/p591145263-fotoplenka-kodak-professional...

If you want to go panoramic on film really on a budget, you can always grab one of those cameras from the late 1990s that have light baffles just in front of a film that crops standard photos to fake panoramic. While it is fully faked, with a proper wide-angle lens, the resulting photos can look not that bad!

Here, I did just that - I acquired Pentax MZ-5, one of those cameras with fake panoramic baffles. The good part is it crops even the viewfinder, the bad part is it's just a crop, you'd need a seriously wide-angle lens for a good effect - 19mm here helped.

 

Bundek park in Zagreb, Croatia, May 2021.

 

Taken with Pentax MZ-5 film camera, with Cosina AF Zoom 19‍–‍35mm F3.5‍–‍4.5ultra-wide angle zoom lens, on a roll of Agfa Vista+ 200 film. 1/90 exposure at ƒ/11, box speed, 200 ASA.

Scanned with my trusty Plustek OpticFilm 8100 dedicated film scanner, using VueScan 9.

Cedar Island - Ocracoke Ferry, Cape Hatteras National Seashore, North Carolina, May, 1977

 

View a slideshow of my Kodachrome album

 

Nikon F2

Nikkor 35mm f/1.4

Kodachrome 25

Scan: Nikon Super Coolscan 8000 ED, VueScan

 

► All my images are my own real photography, not fake AI fraudography.

 

Please don't use my images for any purpose, including on websites or blogs, without my explicit permission.

 

S.V.P ne pas utiliser cette photo sur un site web, blog ou tout autre média sans ma permission explicite.

 

© Tom Freda / All rights reserved - Tous droits réservés

 

Website I 500px l Facebook l Instagram l Grainery

Leica M2

50mm Summicron DR

Fomapan 100 in Rodinal (1:50 for 9 min)

Vuescan

 

-- Molly enjoying her Christmas present.

Tony's Good Pop

Queen St. W., Toronto

December, 1982

 

Nikon F2

Nikkor 24mm f/2.8

Kodachrome 25

Nikon Super Coolscan 8000 ED

VueScan

 

View a slideshow of my Kodachrome album

 

► All my images are my own real photography, not fake AI fraudography.

► Toutes mes images sont ma propre vraie photographie, pas une fausse fraudographie basée sur l'IA.

 

Please don't use my images for any purpose, including on websites or blogs, without my explicit permission.

S.V.P ne pas utiliser cette photo sur un site web, blog ou tout autre média sans ma permission explicite.

 

© Tom Freda / All rights reserved - Tous droits réservés

 

Website I 500px l Facebook l Instagram

"Sloss Furnace"

"Birmingham" "AL"

"Nikon F100"

"35/2 AF-D"

"Arista Premium 400" "expired"

"Pyrocat-HD" "1+1+100"

"Plustek 8100"

"Vuescan"

"Darktable"

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

Schloss Neuhaus

Neuhaus Castle

Fuji Velvia 50

Expired slide film

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD 50 f/1.7

Plustek 7500I

Low-res scan

Vuescan

Höllantalanger, Bavarian Alps

 

Contax 139Q, Distagon 35mm, Rossmann HR400, Scan with Vuescan

Last year, late spring 2014., I acquired a beast of a camera - Horizon 202, Russian swing-lens panoramic film camera.

This was the first roll I shot in it, but not the first developed, though.

The camera has fixed focus, fixed lens, below ƒ/8 is not really sharp, but that lens is apparently optimized for smaller apertures - at ƒ/11 and ƒ/16, it is as sharp as it gets. Also, it is not the easiest camera to use - you should keep it as level as possible, the swing-lens design will exaggerate all mis-levelings. This particular roll also shows slight light-leaks and film tension problems, but none of these problems occurred in later rolls, so I assume it was just because the camera wasn't in use for quite some time, or due to sloppy roll loading.

 

Taken with Horizon 202 camera, on Fuji Neopan 100 film, developed in Fomadon R09 1+50 at 10 min 21°C, fixed with Fomafix at 6 min 23°C. Scanned with Canon CanoScan 8800F and VueScan 9.

Kodak TMax 100 in Rodinal 1+50.

Zenit-11, Helios 44-4.

Epson V600, VueScan.

Velvia never fails to amaze me, it’s just such a shame it’s so hard to get one’s hands onto it these days.

Velvia makes vivid colors appear where the barely are any to begin with.

This shot was taken shortly after sunset, to finish off the film so that I could get it to the lab the next day. The light was nearly gone and I wasn't so sure that it would turn out. Very glad that I took it in the end!

 

Nikon F3 + Sigma Super Wide II 24mm f2.8 + Fujichrome Velvia (old-base stock RVP, not RVP50!)

 

Expiry date: 2000s (?)

Exposure index: 50

 

Scanned on a Nikon Coolscan IV ED using Vuescan.

These lonely flowers sat in a corridor at work so I felt sorry for them and gave them a frame of Ektar.

 

---

Leica M3

Leica Summicron 50 type 2

Kodak Ektar

Sacnned in Vuescan

FED-2 + Industar10 50mmF3.5

/ Kodak Portra160NC

- selfdeveloping Naniwa Color Kit S (1:1)

- vuescan & GTX-970

 

修理屋さんに旅だった FED2ですが、Industar10の描写、なかなかいいと思いませんか?

 

catch you up later

Glen Ogle viaduct, Scottish West Highlands. The viaduct is 140 m long, it was built between 1866 and 1870. Here it's seen from a viewpoint on A85 road.

Taken during my trip to Scotland, late April 2019.

 

Taken with panoramic swing-lens Horizon 202 camera, and its MC2.8/28mm lens, on Agfa Vista+ 200 film. If I'm not mistaken, 1/250 exposure, ƒ/11, metered at 200ASA with my phone.

Scanned with Plustek OpticFilm 8100, with VueScan x64 9.5 to two scans, stitched with AutoPano.

Go visit Istria, and you'll never run out of interesting sights. Some are easy to take a photo of, some aren't, mostly because the crowds there trying to do the same as you. This year was special, too - the first after a pandemic-induced hiatus we had last year, it looks like everybody was trying to be everywhere. :o

 

Here, in Labin, trying to catch a place to eat. Unsuccessfully.

 

Taken with Pentax MZ‍‍‍-‍‍‍S film camera, with smc Pentax‍‍-‍‍FA 100mm F2.8 Macro telephoto lens, on a roll of Silberra Color 50 film. 1/125 exposure, ƒ/4, shot at box speed, at 50 ASA.

Scanned with Plustek OpticFilm 8100 dedicated 35mm film scanner, using VueScan.

Cold but dry January weekend was almost an ideal day for a quick walk around the nearby lake - the lake was still partially frozen, the snow didn't fully melt. If only there was a bit more sun, but hey, I took what I got without complaints!

According to the sources on the 'net, Zenzanon‍-‍PG 80mm lens is hard to find, about 500 lenses were made, yet somehow, one ended in my hands.

 

Taken with Zenza Bronica GS‍-‍1 6×7 medium format film camera, with Zenza Bronica Zenzanon‍-‍PG 80mm F3.5 lens, on a roll of Kodak Tri‍-‍X 320 film, expired in December 2007.

Maxed-out shutter at 1/500, ƒ/9.5, box-speed, 320 ASA. Developed in Kodak Xtol, 1+1 dilution.

Scanned with Canon CanoScan 8800F flatbed scanner, using VueScan x64 9.5.

Neuer Zollhof

Frank O. Gehry architecture

Silver reflecting building

Film is not dead

Expired Fujifilm Sensia

Slide Film

Scanned with Plustek 7500i and Vuescan

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

A very cold weekend didn't stop me from wandering around the park, trying to catch a good photo here and there. The reflections were great, but by the time I got to that part of the park, I was both positively freezing, and near the end of the roll.

 

Taken with Minolta X‍-‍300s film camera and Minolta MD Rokkor 45mm F2 lens, on a roll of Kentmere 100 black and white film. Developed in Kodak Xtol, 1+1 dilution.

1/60 exposure, ƒ/2.8, box-speed, 100 ASA.

Scanned with my trusty Plustek OpticFilm 8100 dedicated film scanner using VueScan x64 9.5.

It is almost as if the pandemic has served as an early circa 1980s Ghost Town video backdrop for the two-tone Specials - but slowing down and having the time during various lockdowns for urban strolls is an ideal opportunity to take in our less bustling surroundings, where you become more aware of what is around you; or indeed, in many cases, what once was around you in history.

 

My mötley crew of Thursday Club pub regulars noted the refurbishment of one of their past watering holes, and what wasn't piquing their interest was the aesthetic changes to the Titwood Bar in Strathbungo, in Glasgow's south side, but the faded sign that began to resurface as the facade came down. It took a ghost sign, and those who remembered it before it was a ghost, to bring it back to life.

 

Likewise, during many lockdown urban strolls, I keep my eye open for 'ghost signs', those wonderful hand-painted signage and advertisement relics - usually dating from 1900 to 1930s - that remind us of a city's past life. And this hobby has a large Facebook following and the hashtag #ghostsign has been used more than 90,000 times on Instagram.

 

London reigns supreme in this spectral pursuit; Glasgow has dozens and growing, many of them documented on a newish and embryonic ghost-sign walking tour guide, which can be downloaded from Ghost Signs of Glasgow (www.glasgowheritage.org.uk/take-a-walk-on-the-ghost-side-...).

 

One of my favourites is a true haunt for many from the past, an old Woolies, the back entrance to the store on 22-26 Charing Cross Mansions, St. Georges Road, backing on to Renfrew Street. The store traded from this location for about 50 years before closing in the early 1970s as the city redeveloped that part of the town for a motorway bypass. Only in the past few years, some original 1920s era signage was revealed at Renfrew Street (the back of the store) – and it is still there today.

 

Leica M3 & 1.4/50 Summilux pre-asph v2

Ilford FP4+ (200)

Perceptol (1+1 - 13min)

Vuescan & Plustek 7600i

Yashica Mat 124G, Yashinon 80mm f3.5. Lomography Color Negative 100 developed in Tetenal Colortec C41 kit

Reflecta ProScan 7200 - Vuescan - Lightroom Classic - Photoshop - Topaz DeNoise AI

 

www.claudiocolombo.net/fotografia.htm

Kodak TMax 400,

Ilfotec DD-X (1+9)

14 min, 20*C

Plustek 8100 & VueScan

That's an ancient Roman column right there, hiding in the shade, and it's a part of an Archaeological Museum in Split, Croatia.

 

Taken with Pentax MV film camera and smc Pentax‍-‍M 40mm F2‍.‍8 pancake lens on AgfaPhoto APX 400 film. Developed in Adonal, 1‍+‍50 dilution at slightly above 22°‍C.

Scanned with Plustek OpticFilm 8100 film scanner using VueScan.

Walking around the block, on a weekend. Even when there were people around, everybody looked like they want to be at home. Cold and clean day in January 2023.

 

Taken with Pentax SF1 film camera, and Sigma AF Super‍-‍Wide II 24mm F2.8 wide-angle lens, on a shortened roll of Agfa APX 400 black and white film.

Developed in Adox Adonal, 1+50 dilution, for 19 minutes.

Scanned with Plustek OpticFilm 8100 film scanner, using VueScan x64 9.5.

# Camera: Rollei 35S

# Film: Ilford XP2

# Scanner: Nikon Coolscan 5000ED with VueScan Software

# Edited with Iridient Developer

 

Spa

Graduation Towers

Spa Graduation Tower

Clock Tower in the background

 

Club Color 200 @ 50

Expired color negative film

Minolta XD5

Minolta Rokkor 50 mm f/1.7 MD

Mid-res scan

Converted to B/W

Vuescan

Plustek 7500i

 

Classic Vehicle Meeting Bünde Ahle

Vintage farm tractors

Deutz - IFA - Massey Ferguson

Fujifilm Velvia

Expired Slide Film

Minolta XD5

Minolta Rokkor 50mm f/1.7

Mid-res scan - Vuescan -Plustek 7500i

   

Rolleiflex 2.8E, Planar 80mm f2.8; ARISTA 100±0; Developed at Mono Lab National, Jingumae, Tokyo; Driver: VueScan 9 (DNG duplication); Scanner: Epson GT-X980; Raw Editor: Capture One Pro 20 (positive conversion and retouch); Browser: Photo Mechanic 6 (selection, management and uploading)

Ilford Pan 400, Fomadon LQN, FomaFix, Epson V600, VueScan, Nikon F90x, Lab-Box.

Is the actual leader of our feline team. 16 years. Quiet guy.

Contax II; CZJ Sonnar 135mm f4,440 finder; Fuji S800 ±0, Developed at Camer wa Suzuki, Yokohama; Driver: VueScan 9 (DNG duplication); Scanner: Plustek Optikfilm 82001 Ai; Raw Editor: Capture One Pro 20 (positive conversion and retouch); Browser: Photo Mechanic 6 (selection, management and uploading)

Hasselblad SWC Ortho 80 ID11 Stock

 

Scanned with Nikon LS9000 + vuescan(linux) + darktable(linux)

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