View allAll Photos Tagged kodakektachrome
Kodak ektachrome 400 (expired in 2000), taken with the Crystar twin lens reflex.
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I love the smell of slidefilm in the morning! This was shot on respooled Kodak 5294 also known as Kodak 100D. Developed at home with the Bellini E-6 kit. Hope U like em'. Cheers, Jonny
Contax G1
Contax 35mm f/2.0 Carl Zeiss Planar T
Kodak Ektachrome 100D
Bellini E-6 Six Bath Kit
Burano, Venezia, Italy
DSLR scan
Lightroom
Descending from Stickle Tarn towards the rocky knoll of Pike How in the middle foreground. The small dark pyramidal shape of Side Pike can be seen just behind it across Great Langdale.
A scan from a slide taken in April 1986 with an Olympus OM4 and Zuiko 35mm f2.8 lens on Kodak Ektachrome.
0-6-0 saddle tank engine 'Lindsay' at Carnforth Heritage Railway, formerly known as 'Steamtown Railway Museum' in Lancashire UK, in summer 1986. Shot using a Nikon F301 with a Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 standard lens on 100 ASA Kodak Ektachrome 35mm slide film. Digitised to DNG raw using a Plustek 8200i 35mm film scanner and processed from raw in Capture One Pro 23. The locomotive was put into storage for many years after Steamtown closed down, but happily was being restored from 2019 and as of 2023 the restoration project was nearing completion - more details here - preservedbritishsteamlocomotives.com/wigan-coal-iron-co-l...
Whenever it was sunny over the Winter, I tried to make some time to go out and, if possible, to shoot some slide film. I'm always interested in learning something new and with the release of new E6 processing kits by a number of different companies, including Ars-Imago, I decided I was going to teach myself reversal processing. I was able to save up 10 films and developed them all in one batch, slowly getting the hang of it over the four or so runs that I did. To my surprise, I didn't run into a single issue and I'm very happy with the results.
Over the next few days I'll be posting some images from the forest at sunset from two of the rolls I developed. I'm far from an expert after just one batch of development, but if you have any questions about the process, then please feel free to ask. Otherwise, I hope you enjoy the images!
Committed to expired Kodak Ektachrome 100 using a Hasselblad 503CX and 100 mm f3.5 lens. Developed using an E6 kit from Ars-Imago and scanned using an Epson V850 using Silverfast.
The much photographed Ribblehead Viaduct captured on slide film in october 1988 with an Olympus OM4 on Kodak Ektachrome.
Also known as Chinaman’s Hat because of its shape. On Oahu’s windward coast, it is located at the north end of Kaneohe Bay, offshore of Kualoa Regional Beach Park. The name means “little lizard” in Hawaiian.
I-don't-know-what-camera-this-was-grrrr | Kodak Ektachrome E100
I suspect this was taken with the Konica C35/FD... maybe Olympus XA... but I've really no idea. The price you pay for not scanning some rolls in until two years later. (sigh)
Digitized: Nikon Z7 | Macro Hexanon AR 55/3.5 | Raleno PLV-S192
Kodak Ektachrome 100 | Hasselblad 500C/M + 3.5/100mm CF
Scanned with Sony a7R3
Lighting: single strobe, 56" strip box double diffused, boomed overhead, camera left.
These are my favourite flowers and I don't even know what variety of flower they are. I get to see these everday so I figured why not upload another shot so you can see them everyday too.
A Belfast-bound set of CAF built DMUs slice between the rustic cliffs of Downhill beach along Northern Irish Railway’s Derry mainline, due just west of Castlerock, UK.
Additionally don’t let the serene nature of this image fool you–with intermittent coastal storms rolling through the area and waves violently crashing on the rocks below wind was abound and attempted multiple times to steal both my hat and raincoat.
© Natalie A. Richardson 2023 — All rights reserved. Do not use without explicit permission.