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This was my last public outing before the Pandemic really kicked in. The event was held in the first week of March and commemorates the start of the Florida cattle drive when beef cattle were herded to the deep water port where they were loaded and shipped for slaughter in Cuba. To this day the cattle drive is commemorated by the remaining cattlemen who make a two week journey from Fort Pierce to Bradenton on what is called the "Cracker Trail".

 

Back in 1996 I worked on a roundabout design for Fort Pierce which was originally designed to have an equestrian statue in the center commemorating the contribution of the Florida Crackers and their contribution to the States history. The statue was never erected.

After my first trip to Hocking Hills last April, there have been an additional 4 trips made, and it's all due to the scenery!

 

Seen here are the Lower Falls, at the opposite end of the Old Man's Cave Upper Falls. This trail is a joy to hike on, especially early morning, when it's just you, the meandering stream, and nature! At the same time this was taken, there was also a frame captured to be converted to DR5 Chrome. In the end, the chromes look 10x as amazing as the B&W negative!

 

Fun fact, during the setup and capture of this image, I heard a bear, only to find out it was sitting in a tree just above the falls! Frantically speech-to-texting in my cell phone, I asked Google, "BEARS IN HOCKING HILLS?!"

 

Yep, there be bears in them thar hills. ;D

 

Tachihara 8x10 Double Extension

Fujinon-W 250mm f/6.7

4 sec. @ f/8ish + front rise

Ilford HP5+ @ ASA 200

14 min. in Pyrocat HD 1:1.5:100

 

www.matmarrash.com

6x6 TXP320 (DR5 Process)

Canon EOS Rebel T2 + EF 40mm stm & ADOX Scala 160 BW Slide Film

135 Pan F

(DR5 Process @ ISO 20)

View On Black

Women's March Philadelphia 2017 35mm Nikon FM2 Ilford XP2

Canonet QL17

Rollei Retro 80s

dr5chrome process

Canonet QL17

Rollei Retro 80s

dr5chrome process

H105THE was a Dennis Dart 8.5SDL / Plaxton-Reebur Pointer B28F new as London Buses DR5 in May 1991. It passed to London United before disposal to The McKindless Group. It was carrying an advert for Tron Pawn Limited, when picking up at its Glasgow terminus.

Rockhill Furnace, Pennsylvania

Mamiya 645E

Sekor 80mm f/2.8

Rollei Infrared 400

Awesomely small 645 folder that belonged to my grandfather from the 30s. Still works.

 

Pentax 645N + 75mm & extension tubes

 

RPX 25 through DR5 positive process.

 

©2018 Joseph Brunjes

All Rights Reserved.

 

www.josephbrunjes.com

Leslie inspects her BW slides (processed from ri-X by Dr5!!

dr5.com/

 

Film Photography Podcast - Episode 114 – December 1, 2014

  

The internet radio show for people who love to shoot film! DR5 Slides from BW film! Kodak 35! Folmer & Schwing camera! 50 Portraits by Gregory Heisler! FPP Foma Surveillance Film! Kodak Vision 3 film and more!

  

filmphotographyproject.com/podcast/2014/11/film-photograp...

 

Image shot with the Canon AE-1p camera / FPP Svema Color 125 film

My son Owen asleep on a car trip back from the coast. I take a fair number of photos of the little guy (who is rapidly getting less and less little) as you might guess. I mean, I am after all never without my cameras. But this is the first I have posted of him, usually I let Wendi post my photos along with hers on her account. But I wanted to get this photo up because not only do I really like it, it has a fairly interesting story to go with it that should interest some people. This is Ilford HP5 shot at 800 and processed through DR5 in their warm tone developer.

 

DR5 is a cool little company in Colorado that takes a variety of black and white films, and I do mean a variety, and processes them as positive slides. They have two different developers to boot. One for neutral black and white slides and the other a warm tone developer. And they look gorgeous. This digital representation pales in comparison to how the actual slides look on a lightbox but it still shows a bit of that quality. The grain of the HP5 at 800 through this developer is just beautiful too. Anyway, I have known about DR5 for a number of years but have never actually sent them any film until I finally decided it was about time I tried them out. I am going to have to do this more often!

 

They also process Scala by the way for any of you photographers still running around with some. I actually have a single roll of 120 left in my fridge...

 

Owen is definitely an easier target while sleeping and I couldn't pass this shot up. Especially with him conked out on my fleece. The lighting was actually kind of tricky as we would drive through patches of shadow and bright light, I was shooting manually on the Contax AX (I just like to say that) I was testing that day and didn't trust the camera enough to switch it over to any automatic setting. And why would I need to in this case, I know perfectly well how to expose film. It is too easy to replace trust in one's abilities with trust in a machine's abilities. Of course I might have completely blown the exposure because of that trust (I do make mistakes afterall), but in this case I didn't.

Nikon F100, 50mm F/1.8D lens, Scala 160 film.

Olympus FT half frame

This camera belonged to my dad. This camera went everywhere and it shows with the damage to the front of the lens.

 

Pentax 645N + 75mm & extension tubes

 

RPX 25 through DR5 positive process.

 

©2018 Joseph Brunjes

All Rights Reserved.

 

www.josephbrunjes.com

 

I shot this on Kodak Tmax 100 and then got it processed as a BW slide by the guys at dr5.com/

 

Whoa! Shoot Film!

filmphotographyproject.com/

Hasselblad 500c

expired agfa scala @ iso 1600

developed as slide @ Agenzia Luce Trieste

epson v500

 

it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ex_ospedale_psichiatrico_di_Volterra

Hasselblad 500c

expired agfa scala @ iso 1600

developed as slide @ Agenzia Luce Trieste

epson v500

 

it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ex_ospedale_psichiatrico_di_Volterra

I had always been curious what B&W Slide Film would look like. And while you can get Scala again, there's a lab that can turn almost any B&W Negative film into a B&W Slide. So a group of us decided to give it a go. Now one of my least favourite films in 35mm is Ilford HP5+ so it was the one I decided to go with. And you know, using the Dr5 process it actually looks awesome. Rich, contrastry, and excellent grain.

 

Nikon F5 - AF Nikkor 35mm 1:2D - Ilford HP5+ @ ASA-400

Processing By: Dr5

Scanner: Epson V700

Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC (2017)

Hasselblad 500c

expired agfa scala @ iso 1600

developed as slide @ Agenzia Luce Trieste

epson v500

 

it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ex_ospedale_psichiatrico_di_Volterra

I had always been curious what B&W Slide Film would look like. And while you can get Scala again, there's a lab that can turn almost any B&W Negative film into a B&W Slide. So a group of us decided to give it a go. Now one of my least favourite films in 35mm is Ilford HP5+ so it was the one I decided to go with. And you know, using the Dr5 process it actually looks awesome. Rich, contrastry, and excellent grain.

 

Nikon F5 - AF Nikkor 35mm 1:2D - Ilford HP5+ @ ASA-400

Processing By: Dr5

Scanner: Epson V700

Editor: Adobe Photoshop CC (2017)

Canonet QL17

Rollei Retro 80s

dr5chrome process

adox scala 160, dr5 process, leica m4 40mm summicron

July 2010, Donauradweg bike trip, Passau, Germany

Lomo lc-a + kodak 100tx

Yashica 635 / Ilford Delta 100 / DR5 Dev 2

4x5 slide from 20 years ago. As soon as I set up the set, my kid barfed on it, lol.

 

Agfa Scala. Graflex Super Graphic, 8 inch Tele-Raptar at f11, rangefinder focused.

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