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Recent clearing by heavy equipment has exposed a remnant of the old Century Distilling Company warehouse near the foot of Western avenue in Peoria Illinois. Long hidden by a grown up thicket of trees, vines and brambles, this place was all but forgotten except by a few. The graffiti people have already discovered it of course. This distillery produced Century Club Bourbon Whiskey, Sampson Straight Whiskey, and Rhythm Dry Gin, among other things. Their heyday was during the 30’s and 40’s after prohibition. Abandonment photographers will have a window of opportunity now until the wreckers arrive. Cheers.
Völklinger Hütte (Germany)
historic blast furnace
UNESCO world heritage site
Zenza Bronica EC-TL
Zenzanon 2.4/80
ORWO NP27, expired 02/91
400 ISO, exposed @ 100 ISO
Rodinal 1+50
11min @ 22°C
View from Castel Sant'Elmo, facing East
Nikon FM2n
Nikkor AI-S 50mm 1:1.8 manual focus lens
Film: Kodak Portra 400 professional grade colour negative film exposed at 200 ISO
Developed and scanned by www.meinfilmlab.de
Another night, another long exposure. I attempted a 666 second exposure, but it turns out all this time I have been devoting to photography instead of Xbox Live has had a detrimental effect on my dexterity. Thus it is in fact ended up a 667 second, or "Neighbour of the Beast" exposure. Whilst that would have made a neat title for a image of suburbia, I then found out you can have too much of a good thing even at midnight, and so I went instead for this slightly darker 397 second exposure.
The lighting is all in camera; the WB correction for the fluorescent lights of the town transforming to this incredible peach. It was an extremely windy night, so the full six minutes worth of cloud moment was immense, creating this rather pleasing aurora effect.
Details: 397 seconds ¦ f/16 ¦ ISO 100.
Update: Explored #63. Many thanks to everyone who has commented, fav'ed and viewed. I massively appreciate the attention and insights offered. Thanks to all!
Taking a break from this stressful moving process I headed out on one of our hottest days, what was I thinking!!!...lol...My reward was capturing this beautiful Bullock's Oriole that landed on this tree 'exposing itself' after taking a bath....thank you little bird.
Thank you for your visit and comments, have a lovely day.
a main span segment that was lifted from a barge, rolled across the pier table, and then lowered into place -- rather than lifted into place directly from a barge. pictured here in the middle of that process.
was out with freeside on this stormy summer night. thanks to him for spotting this shot as we hurriedly sought shelter from the whipping wind.
This mini series includes four images made with three different instant films/cameras. Here, Polaroid 600 B&W and Polaroid OneStep 600 "clamshell."
Epson Scan. I really like the tones of this film. The focus could be tighter, but it's Polaroid, eh.
Water levels in the Columbia and Willamette Rivers at Kelly Point rise and fall based on precipitation/runoff, ocean tides and I suppose management of upstream dams. The fluctuating water levels as well as wakes from vessels frequently wash the roots and bases of trunks of trees. The beach is made primarily of sand and clay, as the soil is washed away the roots are exposed in many fantastic ways as the trees adapt and cling to terra firma.
CARSTRAMON WOOD
Carstramon Wood is one of the largest semi-natural broad leaved woodlands in the area.
Another trip to the East Coast last weekend and again to Spurn Point to capture the groynes with knowledge of what tide heights are needed, this was one of the last I took after spending around 10-11 hours on this little oasis. As the tide went out the ripples in the sand and pools of water looked like a good foreground I thought!
I wasn't going to post this shot as I wasn't happy with the lighting. But I really do dig the shapes exposed by the low water in the creek. I tried my best to capture it in the light we had, it was just soooo bright the whole week. Kris
Light falls on a hidden village in the High Atlas mountains of Morocco, with the ever-present minaret of a mosque.
We were on our drive up to the ski resort at Oukaimeden (2750 m asl) when this scene presented itself. In the surrounding peaks and valleys, men could be heard calling to each other, their voices bouncing off the steep crags.
Morocco_High Atlas_Hillside village_BJ6A0554-1_2025_R5_B_1
Same place, different angle to my last upload.
These colorful boats and heavy clouds are making it too difficult to limit myself to just one shot.
The beach near the small church at A'Chliet on the Kintyre peninsula Scotland.
The boulders prtrude from the sand exposing themselves at low tide.
The exposed roots of the trees alongside the Chiltern Way as it climbs out of Bottom Wood to the hamlet of Holly Copse
After a major shift in sand at the coast caused by the ‘Beast from the East’ a few weeks back. It uncovered an old broken pipe which had been hidden for 4 ~ 5 years on the beach at Blyth & by the looks, it not going to be long before it’s hidden again.
This particular morning was colourless so my intention from the start was, it’s going to be a high key black & white image.
Thanks for looking.