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Developed using darktable 2.6.2

4/25mm Snapshot Filter Blau -2

Leica IIf

des années plus tard

Same description as previous photo.

Taken on Fomapan 200 with Zenit 12XP Helios 44M4.

Developed in Fomadon R09 1+25 @ 5 min.

Postprocessed with The GIMP.

IN ENGLISH BELOW THE LINE

 

Foto presa amb una Leica M3, fabricada el 1963; objectiu Leitz Elmar f2.8 / 50mm; Ilford HP5, revelat amb HC110.

 

Un detall de l'arquitectura modernista de l'Escola Industrial, a Barcelona.

 

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Picture taken with a Leica M3, made in 1963; Elmar f2.8 / 50mm; Ilford HP5 developed in HC110.

 

A detail of the Escola Industrial art nouveau complex in Barcelona.

Camera: Zenza Bronica S2a

Lens: Nikon Nikkor-P 75cm 1:2.8 (yellow filter)

Exposure: 1/60 @ F/5.6

Film: Fomapan 400 Action developed in Kodak Xtol replenished

Old abandoned railroad track and bridge

PENTAX HD-FA 35 mm F2 AL, developed with ACDSee Photo Studio 2020

Lund Cathedral, Sweden

Trix400 in D76 1:1.

Lubitel 166 (LOMO, USSR), tripod.

Light metering: Gossen Lunasix-3.

Scan: Epson V600, VueScan software.

Old Kodak Verichrome Pan 127 shot with broken Penny King toy camera. Developed in Ordinal 1+50

Post processed with Exposure 7 wet plate setting.

The edge of Borth on the Cardigan coast.

 

Tetenal C41 self develop.

Developed using darktable 3.4.1

Developed at home with the Tetenal Colortech C-41 kit using the 30°c method.

 

Olympus Trip 35

D.Zuiko 40mm f/2.8

Lomography Colour 400

Converted to B&W using LR5 & Nik Software.

 

Another one of those super alleyways that Glasgow has to offer. I could spend all day just looking for alleyways to shoot...and I would if I had the time when visiting Scotland.

 

Thanks for taking the time to view my image. Your comments & faves are greatly appreciated.

 

Flickr Group

Flickr Group Website

Flickr Group Blog

My PHOTINGO 2018 Card

 

"HAVE A GO AT OUR OPEN MONTHLY CHALLENGE"

The subjects for this month and details on how to take part can be found here.

Anyone, anywhere with any camera can take part.

 

Leica M3

Voigtländer Nokton 50mm, 1:1,5

Ilford Pan 400

Orange filter

 

Rodinal (1+50), 11:00 min, 20,5°C

 

Epson V850 Pro

SilverFast Ai Studio

 

DXO PhotoLab 5

NIK Collection

Shower cloud over the Castlreagh Hills, Belfast, viewed from Lagan Meadows

This Cumulus Congestus with Pileus became a thunderstorm within a few minutes of this shot.

Shot with a Minolta 50 mm macro lens

8-inch Columbiad guns sit in their casements at Fort Delaware. Located on Pea Patch Island in the Delaware River. The fort was a harbor defense stronghold for the Union forces during the Civil War and acted primarily as a prison for captured Confederate soldiers who were housed in separate quarters on the island. The structure was designed by chief engineer Joseph Gilbert Totten and opened in 1848. Today the fort is open for self-guided tours and exploring and accessible from the Delaware City side of the river by a ferry service.

 

Technical Details:

Nikon F4S 35mm film camera. Nikon 35-105mm F3.5-4.5 AIS lens.

Ilford HP5+ 400 ISO B&W film shot at ISO 800.

F11 in aperture priority mode.

Developed in Diafine for 4 minutes (part A) and 4 minutes (part B) @ 20 degrees Celsius in Paterson 3 reel tank. 5 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick followed by 5 seconds of additional agitation ever minute thereafter.

Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders with ANR glass.

Nikon D80, Nikkor 55-200/4-5.6, ISO 400, f/5,3, 1/320, 150mm

 

Thank you all for faves and comments

DJI Global worked with Hasselblad to develop the camera of the Mavic 2 pro drone to include a 20 megapixel sensor. This means we can print a shot like this really big. I think a 5 foot print of this junkyard in western Kansas would look pretty cool. #photography

leica IIIa - J-12 - foma400 (+1) - fomadon ro9 7min at 20degrC - epson3200

Rolleiflex 3.5 E3

Fomapan 100@100 ISO

Moersch Eco Developer

Semi-stand developing 50 min.

DSLR scan

Zürich, Switzerland

 

Leica M6, Ilford HP5+

This was taken on #35mm film in Korea and developed in Moldova.

Developed in Ilfotec DD-X 1+2 for 12:30 @ 20c.

Erma Felch was the first daughter of Herbert and Emma, a couple who moved west to North Dakota from Vermont and then to Illinois and Iowa.

 

In Vermont, Erma's Grandfather, Eli, was a corporal in the Topsham Rifle Company in the early part of the Civil War. After the move to Illinois following the war, the family lost their farm in a terrible storm.

 

It seems the elder Felches stayed in Illinois, but two of the sisters, Hattie and Evaline Jane, as well as Herbert into Iowa with their own families.

 

Erma was probably born in Illinois and moved with her parents, Herbert and Emma to North Dakota.

 

In 1909, they had a second daughter, Nina Violet. But a few months after Nina was born, Erma died. She was 11 years old and there's no information that I could find on why or how she died.

 

Her stone is odd, with a dead bird lying under the small stump of a tree. I've seen dead birds on gravestone before, and I've seen stones made to resemble stumps, but the combination is curious. I would love to know the story behind it.

  

This is the third "dark" image in a row that I've shared. No, most of my new work isn't this. Most of it is, well, normal. These day-for-night shots are experiments, they're passing.

 

It's fun to look at them and certainly fun to create, but ultimately, they're a little gimmicky. But then, film photography is a little gimmicky.

 

I don't think this is where I'm headed with photography, but I can't promise there won't be more. I'm sure there will be. The newness will expire and the novelty will fade, but there will still be some of these dark shots.

 

And that's okay. I'm not apologizing here.

 

I realize that some folks really like them, just as I understand some some folks really don't. Both are valid and fine by me.

 

I'm not really saying anything different with the dark photos. Maybe I'm saying it differently, but it's the same idea - I'm just imposing an obvious spotlight on the subject.

 

So I'll take a little break from this and see where my new photos lead me (or, at least, the new photos that I've gotten around to developing already).

  

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.

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'Recognition'

 

Camera: Chamonix 45F-2

Lens: Steinheil München Anastigmat Actinar 4.5; 135mm

Film: Fomapan 100

Exposure: f/4.5; 1/25 sec

Process: FA-1027; 1+14; 9min

 

North Dakota

July 2023

Nahskwell 9’5 get up board - Grande plage de Saint Lunaire

MAMIYA RZ67PRO

MAMIYA SEKOR Z110mm F2.8W

KODAK EKTAR100

Self_developed ORIENTAL-CNL_Dev

EPSON GT-X980

Description: This panorama image was stitched from 6 frames of vertical shot. The image depicts the view of the Kuala Lumpur city at night. The immediate area visible around KLCC was slowly being developed with other sky scrapper that will in time block the view of the Petronas Twin Tower from afar.

 

Exif:

6 frames

14mm/1 seconds/f8/Dual ISO (400/800)

Filter: Nil

Post Process:

Lightroom + Color Efex Color Pro

 

Hafidz Abdul Kadir / © All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce these images on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer.

Developed using darktable 3.8.0

Self developed multiple exposures on Fomapan 200 film loaded into an Olympus om10.

When you have that many candles...

Developed in Great Britain by Hawker Siddeley (later part of British Aerospace) the Harrier is one of only two vertical/short takeoff and landing jets to go into full production. First placed in service by the Royal Air Force and Royal Navy the Harrier first saw combat in the 1982 Falklands War between Britain and Argentina. The United States Marine Corps first ordered the Harrier in 1969 with the first deliveries in 1971.

Tampa (/ˈtæmpə/) is a major city in, and the county seat of, Hillsborough County, Florida, United States. It is located on the west coast of Florida on Tampa Bay, near the Gulf of Mexico, and is the largest city in the Tampa Bay Area. The city had a population of 335,709 at the 2010 census, and an estimated population of 369,075 in 2015.

  

Archaeological evidence indicates that the shores of Tampa Bay were inhabited by indigenous peoples for thousands of years. The Safety Harbor culture developed in the area around the year 1000 AD, and the descendant Tocobaga and Pohoy chiefdoms were living in or near the current city limits of Tampa when the area was first visited by Spanish explorers in the 16th century. Interactions between native peoples and the Spanish were brief and often violent, and although the newcomers did not stay for long, they introduced European diseases which brought the total collapse of native societies across the entire Florida peninsula over the ensuing decades. Although Spain claimed all of Florida and beyond as part of New Spain, it did not found a colony on the west coast. After the disappearance of the indigenous populations, there were no permanent settlements in the Tampa Bay area until after the United States acquired Florida from Spain in 1821.

  

In 1824, the United States Army established a frontier outpost called Fort Brooke at the mouth of the Hillsborough River, near the site of today's Tampa Convention Center downtown. The first civilian residents were pioneer ranchers and farmers who settled near the fort for protection from the nearby Seminole population. The town grew slowly, and had become a minor shipping port for cattle and citrus by the time of the United States Civil War. Tampa Bay was blockaded by the United States Navy during the war, and Tampa fell into a long period of economic stagnation that continued long after the war ended. The situation finally improved in the 1880s, when the first railroad links, the discovery of phosphate, and the arrival of the cigar industry jump-started its development, helping Tampa to grow from an isolated village with less than 800 residents in 1880 to a bustling city of over 30,000 by the early 1900s.

  

Today, Tampa is part of the metropolitan area most commonly referred to as the "Tampa Bay Area". For U.S. Census purposes, Tampa is part of the Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area. The four-county area is composed of roughly 2.9 million residents,making it the second largest metropolitan statistical area (MSA) in the state, and the fourth largest in the Southeastern United States, behind Miami, Washington, D.C. and Atlanta. The Greater Tampa Bay area has over 4 million residents and generally includes the Tampa and Sarasota metro areas. The Tampa Bay Partnership and U.S. Census data showed an average annual growth of 2.47 percent, or a gain of approximately 97,000 residents per year. Between 2000 and 2006, the Greater Tampa Bay Market experienced a combined growth rate of 14.8 percent, growing from 3.4 million to 3.9 million and hitting the 4 million population mark on April 1, 2007.[13] A 2012 estimate shows the Tampa Bay area population to have 4,310,524 people and a 2017 projection of 4,536,854 people.

  

Tampa was ranked as the 5th best outdoor city by Forbes in 2008.[15] Tampa also ranks as the fifth most popular American city, based on where people want to live, according to a 2009 Pew Research Center study.[16] A 2004 survey by the New York University newspaper Washington Square News ranked Tampa as a top city for "twenty-somethings." Tampa is ranked as a "Gamma+" world city by Loughborough University, ranked alongside other world cities such as Phoenix, Charlotte, Rotterdam, and Santo Domingo.

  

Credit for the data above is given to the following website:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tampa,_Florida

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0.

Abandoned Shack in Navajo, New Mexico.

 

Photographed with an Olympus XA rangefinder camera. The film is Kodak Tri-X 400 developed in Rodinal 1:50.

Canon Elan IIe

Lensbaby 35mm lens

Expired Kodak ТМАХ 400

Developed in HC-110 1:31 6mins

Epson V500 Scan

I don't talk to flowers, they talk to me and I gladly listen with my eyes!

Shimmering in silky tones I discovered these, a mix if white and pink I had NEVER seen before!

The petals look 'waxy' but feel silky soft!

The peony was originally introduced as medicine.

In fact, its ancient Japanese name "Ebisugusuri" literally means ‘medicine from China’.

However, due to its beautiful and now mostly double blooms, in time, many decorative varieties were developed. In Japanese society, it was seen both as a medicine and a source of beauty.

THANKS for ALL your comments and visits, so appreciated.

 

Have a wonderful day, filled with love and beauty, M, (*_*)

 

For more:www.indigo2photography.com

IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

 

Peony, petals, pink, hot, conceptual art, curves, colour, studio, flower, design, black-background, "Nikon D7000”, square, "Magda indigo"

December rain

film: HP5 expired two years

develop: HC-110 semi stand

cam: Rolleicord IV

Finally developed a couple of Kodak Ektar rolls i shot in Barcelona.

Gaudi's La Pedrera 29/8-15

Rolleicord IV

Xenar 75mm/f3.5

Kodak Ektar 100

Tetenal C41 kit

Canoscan 9000f mkII

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