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600w portable strobe with octabox cam left at 90°.
400w portable strobe with grid stripbox cam right 135°.
triggered by Phottix Strato II Multi.
In the small Carbon County Pennsylvania town of Weatherly, once stood the Weatherly Train Works where the Lehigh Valley Railroad would build and maintain locomotives and rail cars of various types. The train works existed in this building between 1867 and 1910. One of the other major industrial legacies of Weatherly, steel manufacturing, then took over in 1913 and the Weatherly Steel Company was productive in this location until 1989. In recent years, the building has felt the ravages of both time and weather and the roof had collapsed leaving only the stone walls to let anyone know that industry once existed at this spot. Today, the Weatherly Rotary Club works to raise funds to restore the building while also maintaining a small museum on the adjoining ground. My Wife and I were given a tour of the museum by one of the extremely knowledgable Rotary members where we learned all about the ties the town also had to Bethlehem Steel and other nearby industrial giants.
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 65mm F4 PS lens.
Hoya Yellow-Green filter on lens.
Kodak Tmax-400 film shot at ISO 400.
Semi-stand development using Kodak HC-110 1+100 dilution for 1 hour with 30 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick and three turns @ 30 minute mark. Paterson 3 reel tank.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders fitted with ANR glass.
The tall brick walls we build just about everywhere to keep danger and misery out also keeps happiness out
Kamień Pomorski is a town in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship of north-western Poland, on the Baltic coast
The town became the seat of a bishopric in 1176 and a Pomeranian diocese. From time to time the Dukes of Pomerania would also reside in the town (it's their first known capital), ] as it is located in Farther Pomerania. By 1228 the Dominicans were involved in the town's religious affairs, and in 1274 it received Lübeck city rights. Sweden acquired control of the town at the Peace of Westphalia ending the Thirty Years' War in 1648. Acquired by Brandenburg-Prussia in 1679, the town was made part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701. From then until 1945 it remained part of the Kingdom of Prussia, and later Germany. It was administered as part of the Prussian Province of Pomerania. After World War II the region was placed under Polish administration by the Potsdam Agreement under territorial changes demanded by the Soviet Union. Most Germans fled or were expelled and were replaced with Poles expelled from the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union.