View allAll Photos Tagged fp4plus
Monday 10th February 2025.
Camera: Voigtländer Bessa II 6x9 Rangefinder.
Lens: Voigtländer 105mm Color-Skopar f/3.5.
Film: Ilford FP4 Plus ISO 125 120 black & white negative.
Exposure: 1/100 @ f/5.6.
Development: Kodak D-76 1+3 dilution 20C/22 minutes.
Copyright 2025
Tasmania Film Photography
All Rights Reserved
A fun little explore that I've visited some 3 times altogether and enjoyed all of them. Once I've even met a fox there that froze at first contact, then ran away.
This place grabs you not by its architecture, but rather the challenging access, the backyard, and the machinery still present inside the premises, illuminated beautifully by the daylight capturing roof windows.
There was a fire some 2 years ago, but it was a different corner of the property, not this beautiful and beautifully preserved manufacturing plant.
Ilford FP4 Plus 125 reversed in PQ Universal and scanned with Plustek 7600i Ai.
Best enjoyed with Dark Ambient / URBEX
Testing 510 Pyro again. This time with 35mm Ilford FP4 with a Nikon F4, 105mm f/2.5.
Ilford FP4 in 510 Pyro, 1:100 at 20c for 10 minutes using standard agitation.
Nikon F90, 50mm 1.8 series e, ilford fp4 plus, id-11, epson v600.
my photo used as a cover for an album and proud of it:
Originally one of the largest flour rolling mills in Europe and owned by Leethams, it was founded in 1860 and supplied with grain via barge on the River Foss to the original mill close-by, now demolished and the car park.
In 1989 this interesting and imposing building was converted into flats and offices.
The mill closed in 1930 and was subsequently purchased five years later by Quaker philanthropist and York businessman Joseph Rowntree, a champion of social reform and, during his time, one of the major UK chocolatiers.
It became the Rowntree and Co’s Navigation Warehouse as cocoa beans were brought to the wharf, gradually falling out of use in the 1960s as road transport replaced river transport.
Saturday 11th March 2023.
Camera: Hasselblad 500C/M SLR.
Lens: Carl Zeiss 80mm Planar f/2.8.
Film: Ilford FP4 Plus ISO 125 120 black & white negative.
Development: Ilford ID-11 1+3 @ 20C/20 min.
More information about the history of this particular car, which was raced by 1963 and 1965 Formula One world drivers champion Jim Clark during the 1966 Tasman Series, (including a race win at Warwick Farm) may be found at the following web page:
www.motorclassica.com.au/vehicles/1965-lotus-39
COPYRIGHT 2023
TASMANIA FILM PHOTOGRAPHY
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Nikon F2 eye finder, (b1979)
Ilford FP4+ 125 to 200 ISO
Ilford Microphen Dev.
Scan: 1200 DPI
Vienna Austria
photographed 03.2019
Working with fresh black and white film for a change - but still 11 year old diafine developer...
Ilford FP4 Plus at EI200 in Diafine - Pentax MZ-6 SLR with SMC Pentax-DA 300mm f/4. Scanned with the Epson V850 flatbed/Silverfast 9.
(From June 2021)
FP4+_202106_V850_SF9_MZ6_04
IN ENGLISH BELOW THE LINE
Sant Climent de Taüll és la més coneguda, i amb raó, de les esglèsies romàniques de la Vall de Boí. No tan sols l'edifici és excepcional, amb el seu trio d'absis, les seves esveltes columnes i el campanar, considerat per molts com el més bonic de Catalunya. A més ens ha preservat les pintures del Pantocrator del absis central, una veritable icone de la Catalunya medieval. Sense deixar de banda elements treballats en fusta i orfebreria, també medievals. En conjunt, una arca temporal que et trasllada al s. XII.
Fins fa pocs anys, una reproducció substituia in situ els frescos romanics originals. Però s'ha deixat la paret original nua de les seves pintures. En lloc seu, un precís joc de projectors mostra la imatge original en el punt exacte on es trobava, i fins i tot a un meravellós espectacle de llum i so, que acaba amb una idea de com deurien lluir intactes i en tota la seva esplendor durant l'edat mitjana.
La Vall de Boí, a l'Alta Ribagorça, compta amb el conjunt romànic més extraordinari de Catalunya, així com un dels més importants d'Europa. Per això forma part del Patrimoni de la Humanitat de la UNESCO. I amés la natura que ho envolta és preciosa.
ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant_Climent_de_Ta%C3%BCll
ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esgl%C3%A9sies_rom%C3%A0niques_de_l...
www.aldeaglobal.net/artmedieval/Sant%20Climent%20de%20tau...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=h38IovkawPs
====================
Sant Climent de Taüll is the most famous and impressive of the romanesque churches of the Boi valley, in the Catalan Pyrenees. A three-nave church built in the XII Century, it was consecrated in 1123. It's a unique church for several reasons: it's awesome inside frescoes, the beautiful apses, and the exceptional bell tower, considered the most beautiful in Catalonia. It also had several examples of medieval wooden sculpture and furniture. The unique preservation of all those items it's explained by the remoteness of Taüll till the XX Century.
Until a few years ago, a reproduction replaced the original Romanesque frescoes in situ. But the original wall has been left bare of its paintings. In its place, a precise set of projectors shows the original image exactly where it was, and even a wonderful light and sound show, ending with an idea of how they should look intact and in all their glory during the middle ages.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=h38IovkawPs
The Vall de Boí, in the Catalan Pyrenees, is home to one of the most unique romanesque churches in Europe. There are 9 churches part of the UNESCO World Heritage, all of them with most of the structure dating from the XI Century, and including precious frescoes, wooden sculpture and other religious elements, all in romanesque style. All this survived for a thousand years thanks to the extreme isolation of this Catalan valley, surrounded by 3000 m. hight mountains. Obviously, now modern roads make the comunications much easier. Also, the nature surrounds all the churches with beautiful peaks and forests.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant_Climent_de_Ta%C3%BCll
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_Romanesque_Churches_of_the_...
More pictures here (site in catalan):
www.aldeaglobal.net/artmedieval/Sant%20Climent%20de%20tau...
BDZ (БДЖ) locomotive Nr. 01.23, running from Sofia towards Kyustendil at 12th of October 2019, hauling a special train in the case of 110 years since line has been opened.
This particular BDZ 01 series locomotive was built by SLM Winterthur, Switzerland with production number 3593 in 1935.
All 01 locomotives with numbers 01.18 to 01.23 are built with agreement between governments of Bulgaria and Switzerland "Locomotives in return for Tobacco".
Ilford FP4+@250
XTOL stock 9 min. @20C
Praktica MTL5
MC Flektogon 2.4 / 35
Hoya HMC K2
Olympus Trip 35 / D.Zuiko 40mm/2.8 / Ilford FP4+ 125 / Ilford LC29 1+29/20°/12min / Ilford RF 1+4/4min
Ilford FP4 Plus 125 reversed in PQ Universal and scanned with Plustek 7600i Ai.
Best enjoyed with Dark Ambient / URBEX
Hasemi 4x5 wooden field camera(large format), Lens: 90mm Nikkor f/4.5, Film: Ilford FP4 Plus developed in Ilfosol-3 1+9, Film Scanner: Epson Perfection V750 Pro
Nikon F eye finder (1972)
Ilford FP4+ metered film 125 ISO
Ilford Microphen Developer
photographed, Dec.2019
Plant in a crack of a rock (probably armeria maritima also sea thrift or sea ping, without the pink flowers), close to the sea coast near Gothenburg, Sweden. Taken on Ilfort FP4Plus.
Looking east on East Techachapi Blvd towards the Martin Marietta Tehachapi Cement Plant. Monolith CA USA, 4 May 2021.
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FILM TO DIGITAL IMAGE
[Camera] – Nikon FM2n (lens not confirmed)
[Film/Processing] – ILFORD FP4 PLUS/ ILFOSOL 3 (1:14)
[Scanner] - Nikon D70s DX format DSLR with AI 55mm F3.5 Micro-Nikkor + 20mm extension tube
[Digital Processing] - PAINT SHOP PRO 2022
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Spiritual, mystical, ancient, chilling. One of my favorite photos all year thus far.
I recently bought a big lot of old expired baryta papers from a town close to mine. Said lot included two boxes of Maco Expo WA3 which I had never heard of before. Tried it in lith developer – with great success! I love the super harsh contrast, coarse grain and slight warm color it produces, consistently. I have made a few more lith prints with this paper, I'll upload scans of those over the next few days.
Lith print onto Maco Expo WA3 with Moersch Easy Lith 1+10
Nikon F3 + Nikkor 50mm 1:1.8 + Ilford FP4+ in Rodinal 1+50
Print scanned on a Heidelberg/Linotype-Hell Saphir Ultra II with Vuescan.