View allAll Photos Tagged fujiacros100
Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas
Wista 45SP, Nikkor SW 120mm f/8, Fuji Acros 100, developed in Adox FX-39III 1+19
Made this one a few years ago while out with Mr. Grant Murray, and Nathan Wirth.
I have always had a connection with this image, but I never felt like it was complete.
Contax 645
Zeiss planar f2, @f2.8
Acros 100 @100
HC110
Rescanned this one reciently and replaced one I posted a while back.
Nikon F100
Nikkor 1/1.8 50mm series E (pancake)
Fuji Neopan 100 Acros
R09 - One Shot (Rodinal) 1/25 @ 20 celcius 6.30 minuts
Agitation for the first 60 seconds / 5 seconds agitation at each minute.
Scanned on Epson V750
Photoshop CS6 Portable clean dust, and convert to JPG
Gerhart Machinery in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania where once a year they hold a "Mack Day" where both new and old Mack Trucks are shown. During that day Gerhart also opens their graveyard full of retired cranes, drag lines, bulldozers, dump trucks, massive gears and all sorts of rusting mining and construction equipment. It's a photographic Disneyland.
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 65mm F4 PS lens.
Hoya Yellow-Green filter on lens.
Fuji Acros 100 film shot at ISO 100.
Semi-stand development using Kodak HC-110 1+100 dilution for 1 hour with 30 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick and three turns @ 30 minute mark. Paterson 3 reel tank.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders fitted with ANR glass.
A test using a Nikon F6, the heavy but beautiful Zeiss 85mm/1.4 Milvus and Balanced daylight fill with a SB900 flash and Fuji Acros 100 Film
The Estey House dates to the last quarter of the 18th century. The house was rebuilt after a devastating fire in 1786. Captain Moses Estey was a chair maker and veteran of the Revolution. The Georgian-style house was modeled after the Ford Mansion in Morristown, New Jersey. The house was moved in 1968 from downtown Morristown to its present location at Historic Speedwell after being threatened by demolition as part of an urban renewal project.
Historic Speedwell in Morristown preserves the estate of Stephen Vail, proprietor of the Speedwell Iron Works from the early to mid-1830s. Additionally, the site includes the factory building where Alfred Vail and Samuel F.B. Morse demonstrated a perfected electromagnetic telegraph to the public for the first time in January 1828.
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 65mm F4 PS lens.
Hoya Yellow-Green filter on lens.
Fuji Acros 100 film shot at ISO 100.
Semi-stand development using Kodak HC-110 1+100 dilution for 1 hour with 30 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick and three turns @ 30 minute mark. Paterson 3 reel tank.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders fitted with ANR glass.
Shofuso Japanese House and gardens were built in 1958 in 16th century style. It is located on the grounds of the Horticultural Center in the West Philadelphia section of Fairmount Park. The perfectly proportioned architecture of the main structure and adjoining tea house is enhanced by an ornamental garden and picturesque pond. Tours of the house are available and periodically there are special events offered including tea ceremonies, bonsai plant showings and more. Finding a cultural nugget like this so close to the city of Philadelphia is very unique and special and definitely needs to be checked out if you are looking for something a little different.
For more information on visiting Shofuso, check out Shofuso.com
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 65mm F4 PS lens.
Hoya Yellow-Green filter on lens.
Fuji Acros 100 film shot at ISO 100.
Semi-stand development using Kodak HC-110 1+100 dilution for 1 hour with 30 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick and three turns @ 30 minute mark. Paterson 3 reel tank.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders fitted with ANR glass.
Taken reasonably early on a day I went to catch autumn colours (!) in the mist. Taken with Hasselblad 500C on Fuji Acros II film
Home developed etc
This relict stands starkly against the overcast sky and snowy slopes of Timberline. It's hard to see with the white on white nature of image, but if you look closely you can see the resulting layer of thick ice from days/weeks of snow and wind.
I'm sure this ice builds up and then melts, year after year. I wonder if the ice is a help or a hinderance. Does it help to reinforce against the brutal alpine elements, or weigh down and tax what may already be a weakened trunk?
Either way, it's a beautiful contrast.
Image with my Hasselblad 500cm
Olympus PEN-F mit G. Zuiko Auto-S 1.4 40mm, Fuji Acros 100, Blende 5.6, EPSON Perfection V750 PRO.
Die Olympus PEN-FT ist eine analoge Kamera mit Aufnahmeformat 18-24mm, sog. Halbformat. Verwendet wird ein normaler 35mm Kleinbildfilm. Damit sind 72 Aufnahmen pro KB-Film möglich. Auf den Markt kam die Kamera 1963.
"The Olympus Pen FT, the icon of the half-frame camera genre, was the second iteration of the Olympus Pen F-series produced by Olympus from 1963 to 1970. The 35mm half-frame SLR film cameras, which include the Pen F (1963-1966), Pen FT (1966-1972), and Pen FV (1967-1970), was a unique design with features not seen on other SLR film cameras" (zitiert aus www.imagingpixel.com/p/olympus-pen-ft.html).
A giant gear wheel sits idle against a 1976 Northwest 180D 67 1/2 ton shovel. From the construction and large equipment graveyard at Gerhart Machinery in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 65mm F4 PS lens.
Hoya Yellow-Green filter on lens.
Fuji Acros 100 film shot at ISO 100.
Semi-stand development using Kodak HC-110 1+100 dilution for 1 hour with 30 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick and three turns @ 30 minute mark. Paterson 3 reel tank.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders fitted with ANR glass.