View allAll Photos Tagged digitizing
Camera: Kodak Retina IIIc
Lens: Rodenstock Retina-Heligon 2/50mm
Film: Kodak Farbwelt 200 expired 2007
Developed by flash foto, München
Digitized by: Sony a7RIII, Minolta 3.5/50mm Makro
Digitized from an old transparency. Originally shot with an Olympus OM1, Tamron 90 mm Æ’2.8 Macro. Original film type escapes me.
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Canon EOS 3 | EF 16-35mm f4 | Kodak Ektar 100
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro
Home developed in Unicolor Stock | 102ºF
IMG_4137-positive-Edit
Digitized on Valoi Easy120 film scanning kit using Fujifilm GFX 100S with adapted to it Carl Zeiss Macro-Planar 120mm F/4 CFE lens.
Sometimes when near Canary Wharf you can almost see the zeroes and ones flying around the board. Of course it's all just a zero sum game. Sometimes you can hear the numbers flying offshore.
Thank you for your interest. Please do not post spam, irrelevant poetry or prose, or links to your works in the comment section. I will find my own way to your images. All my images are my own original work, under my copyright, with all rights reserved. This means the owner's permission must be sought and obtained, before using any image for ANY purpose.
Copyright infringement is theft.
Camera: Agfa Ambi Silette (1958)
Lens: Color Solinar 2.8/50mm
Film: Kodacolor 200
Developed by: flash foto, München
Digitized with Sony a 7RIII
Location: Murano, Venezia, Italia
Nikon F3, Nikkor 50/1.8 AI-s, O56 orange filter, Cinestill XX@250, HC-110/dil, B, 6 min. Digitized with Nikon D700/ES-2.
(Mamiya RB67; Sekor C 3.8/90mm; Ilford FP4+ developed in Moersch Eco Film Developer; digitized with DSLR+hugin; edited with GIMP)
Image was scanned from a Kodachrome 64 slide shot with Nikon F2A + 28 mm. f/2.8 lens at 1/125 and f/5.6. Conversion to black and white was done using Tonality CK.
Digitized Kodachrome 25 slide. At the time these photos were taken, public foot traffic was allowed across the dam in addition to official vehicles. Access to the dam is very tightly controlled today. The twin rectangular towers visible in the photo are elevators that travel from the top of the dam down to floors below and eventually to the power generators at the bottom of the dam.