View allAll Photos Tagged graflex

Camera: Graflex Speed Graphic

Film: Kodak Ektar 100 (120)

Scanner: Epson V850 Pro

Scannersoftware: Silverfast

Graflex Speed Graphic Large Format 4X5

Lens: No.3 Acme synchro Ilex F4.5 6 1/2 inches (166mm) (Maybe Year 1950-1960)

120 back

Kodak EPP

CineStill D9 First Developer Bath 1+1 9mins 15 Sec)

Rinse 6 Lifes or 6 Inversion Cycles

Color&Reversal Bath 7mins

Rinse Fill and Empty Tank 6 times

Bleaches & Fixer Bath 8mins

Wash fill and Empty 10 times

Stabilizer: 1min

Scan:Epson V800

© All Rights Reserved

My "baby" Graflex. The smallest large format camera. It processes plan film in size 6x9 cm, but can also expose 120 film.

 

Camera: Nikon F90

Film: Kodak Portra 400

Scanner: Epson V 850 Pro

Scannersoftware: SilverFast

The Spam Cam ----

body: David white - stereo realist 1947.

bellows: SPAM ham can.

lens: Graflex Optar 90mm - f/6.8

finder: tele-wide

image plane: 25x94mm

film load: 35mm

 

project goal: create a super pano in 35mm format:

I cut out the metal dividers of a broken David White stereo camera and paired it with a 4x5 lens.

Cut a Spam Ham can in half and fitted the two together so I could move it forward and back and fit perfectly between the camera body and front panel. Then trimmed it to achieve the required 90mm focal length. Held together with machine screws and only a small amount of Epoxy cement until I am confident I have the focal length exact.

 

total cost: $74

lunch: Spam and cheddar cheese sandwich.

Lots of work, but totally fun --- YES!!!

Analogica con l' americana Kodak Signet 35 a telemetro ( 1950 ), Ektar 44 mm F 3.5, Fomapan bianco e nero 200 asa. Un altro telemetro americano, funziona ma devo sistemare l' allineamento della messa a fuoco

Graflex Speed Graphic

Lens: No.3 Acme synchro Ilex F4.5 6 1/2 inches (166mm) Year 1950-1960)

Shanghai GP3 100

Kodak HC110 1+63 19C 18mins

Epson Scan V800

 

© All Rights Reserved

© All Rights Reserved

Graflex Speed Graphic 4X5

Graflex 135mm Optar F:4.7

Scanner: Canon EOS 60D

 

Mi galeria en Color www.flickr.com/photos/samycolor

Mi Galeria en B&N www.flickr.com/photos/samycollazo

Kodak Trix 320

Kodak HC-110 Dil: B

Silver Efex Pro 2

Lightroom 3

Graflex with Rodenstock Imageon lens, foma 400, 4x5 inch

Art paper

Moersch SE 5

 

Graflex Speed Graphic Large Format 4X5

Lens:Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar 1:4.5 F=21cm (1920-1930)

Fomapan 100 4x5 film

F16, 1/2"

 

HC110, 1+31, 6min30"

Fix 10mins

 

© All Rights Reserved

Graflex Speed Graphic Large Format 4X5

Lens: Cooke Telephoto Anastigmat F/5.6 320mm 12 1/2 Inch Series III (Made by Taylor-Hobson England (Maybe Year 1906-1923)

120 film Back

Kodak EPP

CineStill D9 First Developer Bath 1+1 9mins 15 Sec)

Rinse 6 Lifes or 6 Inversion Cycles

Color&Reversal Bath 7mins

Rinse Fill and Empty Tank 6 times

Bleaches & Fixer Bath 8mins

Wash fill and Empty 10 times

Stabilizer: 1min

Scan:Epson V800

© All Rights Reserved

Graflex Speed Graphic

Lens: Carl Zeiss Jena 210mm F4.5

Ilford HP4 400 Expired 1979

 

F8.0 1/20

 

Self developing:

HC110 - 16mins

 

© All Rights Reserved

  

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'The Figure'

 

Camera: Graflex Speed Graphic

Lens: Steinheil Rapid Antiplanet 6,5;27cm

Film: Fomapan 100

Exposure: f/12; 2sec; Yellow Filter

Process: FA-1027; 1+14; 9min

 

Douglas County, Washington

April 2022

Camera: Graflex Speed Graphic

Filmback: Shen Hao 6x17

Film: Ilford HP5 400

Developer: Ars Imago Monobath

Scanner: Epson V850 Pro

ScannerSoftware: SilverFast

F3.7 105mm Kodak Extar Lens 4x5 format. A news photographer's go to camera in it's day.

 

(History)

The Speed Graphic was a press camera produced by Graflex in Rochester, New York. Although the first Speed Graphic cameras were produced in 1912, production of later versions continued until 1973.

 

The most famous Speed Graphic user was New York City press photographer Arthur "Weegee" Fellig, who covered the city in the 1930s and 1940s.

Ilex Graflex 127mm f 3.5

I shot a good handful of photos of this doorway with varying amounts of cows in frame.

 

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'Also Ran'

 

Camera: Graflex Speed Graphic

Lens: Steinheil Rapid Antiplanet 6,5;27cm

Film: Fomapan 100

Exposure: f/24; 2sec; Yellow Filter

Process: FA-1027; 1+14; 9min

 

Washington

May 2022

Graflex Speed Graphic 4X5

Graflex 135mm Optar F:4.7

Scanner: Canon EOS 60D

 

Mi galeria en Color www.flickr.com/photos/samycolor

Mi Galeria en B&N www.flickr.com/photos/samycollazo

Kodak Trix 320

Kodak HC-110 Dil: B

Silver Efex Pro 2

Lightroom 3

Another instant camera spotted at LA MakerFaire

I was recently given this wonderful Graflex Speed Graphic ... I believe its dated about 1939? Its fully functional and is once again being used to do what it was designed to do .. capture images.

 

www.sollows.ca -- www.instagram.com/jsollows

What better way to test my recently purchased Graflex Speed Graphic than to use my favourite lens to photography my favourite tree.

My Favourite Tree.

Local Woodland, Meltham

Graflex Speed Graphic 4x5 Camera, Wollensak Verito 8 3/4 Diffused Focus F/4 lens, Ilford FP4+ developed in ID11 at 1+1

 

Graflex Crown Graphic

Polaroid 59

 

Polaroid Week 2022

Ilex Graflex 127mm f 3.5

Graflex Crown Graphic

Polaroid 669

Polaroid Week 2015

Ilex Graflex 127mm f 3.5

Graflex Speed Graphic

Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar 210mm F4.5

Film: Efke PL100M 9x12 expired 2009

Dev: HC110 1+31 6mins (20 c)

Fix: 5mins

Scan:Epson V800

© All Rights Reserved

Shanghai GP3 100 4X5 Film

Camera: Graflex Speed Graphic

Lens: Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar 1:4.5 F=21cm (1920-1930)

 

Shot at: F22, 1/5 Seconds under two LED lights indoor

Developer: Kodak HC110, 1+31, 20c, 7:30mins

Fix 11mins

 

© All Rights Reserved

Graflex Speed Graphic Large Format 4X5

 

Lens: Cooke Telephoto Anastigmat F/5.6 320mm 12 1/2 Inch Series III (Made by Taylor-Hobson England (Maybe Year 1906-1923)

www.cookeoptics.com/t/history.html

 

120 film Back

Kodak E100VS

 

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Graflex Crown Graphic

Polaroid 59 expired 12/89

 

Fluidr

 

'Roid Week 2012 - Day 5

Graflex Crown Graphic

Polaroid 59

Polaroid Week 2016

Contact print of a very expired and moulded 4x5" Kodak Plus-X negative.

Graflex Series B - Tri-X 4x5 sheet film

Here is another photo taken with Ansco Triple S Ortho, expied in September of 1955. It, along with 44 others, are in my new book, Expired, Vol. 3.

 

From the text in the book:

 

Because this stop along Burn Road was so memorable, I returned there on a much clearer day the following summer. I stopped, stepped out of the car, and looked upon a very normal, even boring, sunny scene.

 

The road, the fences, and the burned out trees were still there, to be sure, but in the brighter view of the Sunny 16 light, nothing seemed interesting anymore. Nothing seemed worth shooting.

 

And so I didn't shoot. Not there, at least. I found other, amazing shots. But this perfect spot was fleeting. It was only there with the smoke and in the waning light of evening.

 

Returning to a location over and over will allow the place to show you its different sides. Curlew National Grassland is one of those places for me. We'll discover more as we move along.

 

For some reason, I gave this image much more light than the previous. I shot it at an aperture of f/4.5, as the other. Though I held the shutter open for an entire second. That's more or less a four stop difference.

 

This difference is slightly noticeable when comparing the two photographs.

 

The smoke would come and go over the next several days.

  

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Tree Along Burn Road

 

Camera: Graflex Crown Graphic (1954)

Lens: Steinheil München Anastigmat Actinar 4.5; 135mm

Film: Ansco Triple S Ortho; x-9/1955

Exposure: f/4.6; 1sec

Process: HC-110; 1+90; 18min

 

Curlew National Grassland, Idaho

July 2021

  

Graflex Crown Graphic

Polaroid 59

 

Polaroid Week 2016

Graflex, Ektar, x-ray film in D-23

Poor Farm Rd, Bath County, Va

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