View allAll Photos Tagged bleaching
Manzanita wood does not rot very quickly. Once dead, it merely bleaches white and becomes more brittle. It seemingly becomes even more white and more brittle over time. The fissures in rock outcrops harbor moisture that deep rooted plants can exploit. Note the young manzanita at lower left.
Bleached performing at Fun Fun Fun Fest, Austin, Texas, November 4, 2012.
Copyright 2012 Steve Hopson, www.stevehopson.com
Please no use without license.
Photo using the Bleach Brown custom filter available for download. The custom filters are a new feature available in CameraBag Desktop 1.5. The new version is available 5/18.
The entrance of the Bleacher Bar, from Landsdowne Street, Boston. The bar is actually located under the center field bleachers, in Fenway Park and is open year round. This shot was taken during game 2 of the 2013 ALCS. The Red Sox beat the Tigers 6-5, with a dramatic comeback win.
Seven bracket exposure, merged and tonemapped with Photomatix. Final adjustments made with Photoshop.
Leica MP
Leica Summilux 35mm f/1.4 II
Kodak T-Max 400 @ 800 ISO
Ars Imago FD (1+39)
9 min 20°C
Scan from negative film
^^
1280 x 1024: img299.imageshack.us/img299/7869/bleachtf3.jpg
Wallpaper by silver145: silver145.animepaper.net/
Canon Canonet
Fuji Velvia 100F
cross-processed in Tetenal C41 AND bleach bypassed
The latest experiment in bleach bypassing: xpro'd slide film that's also bleach bypassed. Conclusion: there's definitely a little bit of Velvia's characteristic redshift (more like a pinkshift), but mostly it just looks bleach bypassed. Not worth wasting a roll of Velvia on.
I'd bleached my hair out and then went to a party before finishing the whole hair process I'd planned, and had fun with some product (making a very sad fauxhawk) as long as I was looking ridiculous. Michelle's in the background staring at her phone.
Bleach Bypass Study
Original photo is here -> www.flickr.com/photos/woodenship/6191631167
My teacher' Bleach Bypass photo :-) -> www.flickr.com/photos/kumarin/6309761802/in/pool-1766208@...
Corals live close to their temperature maxima, and even just a degree of heating over the summer months can cause a stress response called ‘coral bleaching.’ Why some coral species tolerate heat anomalies better than others is subject of intense research. Central GBR, March 2017. Credit: G. Torda
This print was way to dark (underexposed negative). I almost threw this one in the bin.
But after bleaching it, it looks a lot better.
I think I like the effect of bleaching just as much as the toning. :-)
Camera: Olympus Trip-35
Negative: Fomapan 400 developed in ADOLUX APH 09
Print: ADOX Vario Classic RC matt developed in Agfa Neutol Liquid NE, pre-washed in a washing soda solution, bleached