View allAll Photos Tagged dr5
Kodak Retinette 1A
Fun camera.
Zone focus
Super sharp Schneider lens
film advance on the bottom
I know the bokeh looks fake but it is exactly as shot.
Lens wide open probably 2.8 with extension tubes created this very shallow depth of field.
RPX25 is still my favorite film for DR5 processing.
Pentax 645N
Rollei RPX 25 (DR5 to positive)
©2018 Joseph Brunjes
All Rights Reserved
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.
The lonely Lost Mesa taken with my 4x5 Arca-Swiss large format camera on Efke 25 B+W sheet film processed in DR5 into a B+W Positive
Prior to my elder son's wedding on October 12. What a day...
Pentax 67 on Tri-X 320. Shot at iso 100 and processed as a positive by Dr5 chrome.
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!
Having ventured up and down the Old Man's Cave Trail in Hocking Hills, I can't tell you how many times I've had to cross this lovely stairway. On my way back to the car after capturing the Lower Falls, the filtering morning light was practically begging for a picture. This is the result.
Believe it or not folks, the DR5 Chrome version of this has even more DMax, and I'd need a drum scanner to show you all its beautiful detail!
Tachihara 8x10 Double Extension
Fujinon-W 250mm f/6.7
4 sec. @ f/22ish + front rise, swing
Ilford HP5+ @ ASA 200
14 min. in Pyrocat HD 1:1.5:100
Laboratory building at the North Campus of the University of Michigan. Formerly Pfizer Pharmaceuticals. Looks like a boiler house.
Photographed on a blue sky night using Kodak Ektachrome EPY tungsten film using a Horseman VH-R field camera with a 120mm lens. I purposly did not do any colour correction. Metered with a Sekonic L-758DR based on a bright area and exposed 2 stops slower.
This was the first time I used DR5 for E-6 processing. They did nice work. The transparencies were very clean.
The light at the end of the South Pier at St. Joseph Michigan.
Photographed with Efke 25 film followed by DR5 reversal processing. The slide was scanned with Nikon Coolscan 5000ED using Vuescan. Post processing was a collaborative effort with Flickr User Longbowsnyper.
Nikon f3
nikkor 50 mm 1.4
expired 2002 agfa scala
pushed to 1600
developed at Agenzia Luce, Trieste.
epson v500
scanning this film is a real pain in the a**. the blacks are so black and dark that my epson v500 can't read well the negative.
i invite you to try this film once. the results viewed live are incredible.
Vík, Ísland (2020)
B&W slides via dr5
High res scans by DiJiFi (Shoutouts to @lizettebelen & @katbeart who did a great job with these!)
There is something rather voyeuristic about this shot yet its draws you in, makes you watch, makes you want to know who scooter girl is.
Who are you scooter girl? You came into my life in a flash of hot metal and darted off in your high heels never giving me a glimpse of your face buried behind those golden locks.
ONE OF SEVERAL BOUGHT OF THE INTERNET RECENTLY. IF ANYONE CAN FILL IN ANY DETAILS PLEASE FEEL FREE, ALSO IF ANYONE KNOWS WHO OWNS THE COPYRIGHT PLEASE LET ME KNOW.
SIMON
An old shot I dug up that I took of Latourell Falls in the Columbia River Gorge, back when I was still a fairly inexperienced photographer trying things out and learning rules (and when and how to break them).
This day I had taken out a Bronica S from the store to test. These cameras are... not the greatest. They are not bad, but unfortunately there are probably more reasons not to buy them anymore than to buy them. I had never shot one before and it needed the testing as they tend to be mechanically unreliable. One reason to like these cameras though is that Nikon made their lenses for a number of years, so many of the old Bronica lenses are actually Nikkors and very sharp. Anyway, I got two shots off of Latourell Falls and then the back jammed, as I was saying above.... This shot was a bit overlapped with the other shot following it so I had to crop it down from its original square format, but I still really like it.
The other thing I always kind of liked about this image is that I shot it with Scala film, which is a black and white slide film. A beautiful one at that. This scan does not really do it justice I noticed after looking at it last night on the lightbox. The tones in the slide are pretty amazing. I miss Scala, it was an incredible film that went the way of the dinosaurs when Agfa went out of business a couple of years ago. Though I have not tried it, there is, or at least recently was, a company called DR5 (www.dr5.com) that would develop pretty much any black and white neg film as positive, including infrared!
Anyway, just a couple odd tangents about this picture I remembered when I pulled it out to scan last night.
In a dream, in a vision of the night,
when deep sleep falls on men
as they slumber in their beds,
he may speak in their ears
and terrify them with warnings,
to turn man from wrongdoing
and keep him from pride,
to preserve his soul from the pit,
his life from perishing by the sword.
Witch hazel blossoms glowing in the sunlight, shot last spring in the NY Botanical Gardens. I was surprised by the dreamlike quality of this shot.
Nikon FM2n + 50/1.4 AIS, shot on Adox CHS 50. This film has really strong contrast and when reversal processed by DR5, can produce some really interesting shots.