View allAll Photos Tagged forestpath
Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)
Lens: Novar Anastigmat f/3.5 75 mm
Film: Ilford HP5 Plus 400, rated @ ASA 1600
Exposure: 1/200 sec and f/5.6, hand-held
Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab
Edited under Adobe Lightroom
One of the pictures to see the different look of HP5 rated @ 1600 (pushed two stops) in comparison to Delta 3200 rated @ 1600 (the actual sensitivity of this film).
Using the Novar triplet lens with wide aperture f/5.6 results in a distinct softening, which adds to the background softening from the limited depth of field.
Snowy path through the forest - like a nursery rhyme. Not a surprise these woods star in so many films.
Camera: Rollei 35
Lens: Tessar f/3.5 40 mm
Film: Fomapan Action 400, rated @ ISO 200
Exposure: 1/125 sec and f/8, hand-held
Film developed and scanned by Foto Brell, Bonn
Edited under Adobe Lightroom
Winter without snow, most of the land looking grey, but then one late afternoon the late light falls through the leafless trees by the lake...
Most of the leaves here are gone now. This was taken a couple of weeks ago when there was actually some light! Since then we have been plunged into dreary darkness and constant rain. Today is the first day when there as been a tinge of light.
This one is for Rebecca and Emory who are celebrating their respective birthdays and who both enjoy walking in the countryside.
A path in Elizabeth Park - West Hartford, Connecticut. I spend a lot of time in this park - it's beyond beautiful. I used 2 textures on this: Ghostbones "Vintage Sky" and IrisB477 "Copper Grunge". Thanks, guys.
Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)
Lens: Novar Anastigmat f/3.5 75 mm
Film: Kodak Portra 160
Exposure: 1/100 sec and f/8, hand-held
Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab
Edited under Adobe Lightroom and Nik Silver Efex Pro
A small world, yet lot to discover. The autumn colour is in the mind, in the soul. It's just an reflection of that.
Daniel Boone Forest, Big South Fork National Recreation and River, Yahoo Falls, McCreary County, Kentucky
I call this place, hidden away and known only to local residents of Half Moon Bay in northern California, the "Enchanted Forest". That's not its real name.....to my knowledge it has no name and is not shown on any map. The trees along the trail were originally placed here to provide a barrier for farmers against the strong winds that often blow along the northern Pacific coast. In time the trees formed a dense canopy that, today, shades the understory of this forest trail.
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This is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks,
Bearded with moss, and in garments green, indistinct in the twilight,
Stand like Druids of eld, with voices sad and prophetic,
Stand like harpers hoar, with beards that rest on their bosoms.
Loud from its rocky caverns, the deep-voiced neighboring ocean
Speaks, and in accents disconsolate answers the wail of the forest.
This is the forest primeval.
Poem by H.W. Longfellow (from Evangeline, 1847)
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Snow muted everything as the narrow path curved into the timber, banks piled high on either side like the world had been gently shoveled into silence; the trees leaned in heavy with fresh powder, their branches stitched in frost, and somewhere ahead two small lanterns burned—steady, warm dots in the blue-gray dusk—making the road feel less like a place you got lost and more like a place you were being quietly guided back to, one careful step at a time.