View allAll Photos Tagged kodakektachrome

Exposure time was 2.5 hours at f11 on Ektachrome E100. Nikkormat FT3, 16mm AF Nikkor D fisheye lens

One of Fiona's cameras + Kodak Ektachrome 64T (expired 01/07) + Conventional double exposure + Redscaled + Vivitar Ultra Wide & Slim + 3rd exposure + Cross Processing. (!)

 

The crazily marvellous results of an inadvertent multiple exposure collaboration between myself and the wonderfully mad (& very lovely) ~fiona~ once again. She thinks she might have shot the roll through twice by accident in Melbourne and New York - possibly three times - then passed it on to me. I definitely only shot it once - in Barcelona.

 

As far as I am concerned, this will always be known as our 'Two Seasons, Three Continents & Forever Crazy' Roll!

 

We did not plan individual frames, and had no idea what the other would shoot, what camera they would use, nor did we attempt to line up the frames. There are a few occasions when I've felt the need to crop, but not much and not on many from this roll. Apart from some cropping, these are unedited supermarket scans.

date stamped on slide May 1980

Kodak Ektachrome 100

Olympus OM-2n

Zuiko 28mm f/2.8

Epson Perfection V550

date stamped on slide March 1980

A breezy day at Kinder Downfall.

A scan from a slide taken in 1986 with an Olympus OM4 with a Zuiko 35mm f2.8 lens on Kodak Ektachrome.

date stamped on slide March 1980

I love FPP's RetroChrome 320. Not because I'm the guy actually hand-rolling it! It's wonderful! Giving that old-timey look tp portraits or street shots alike!

 

I shot Moosey & Sophie with my Canon FTb / Canon FD 50mm f1.4 lens. Fave lens fer shur!

Holga 120N with Kodak Ektachrome 200 (expired 2008).

New premises for a new bank used to be a jewellers bought our engagement rings from there 40+ years ago@

date stamped on slide July 1972

death valley, california (from the archive)

 

www.clearbluelight.co.uk

splashed and crossed

Pentax 645NII // Ektachrome E100VS (expired)

Mamiya M645 1000s

Mamiya Sekor C 80mm f/1.9

Kodak Ektachrome 200 Professional, EPD-120, Kodak Safety Film 6036, expired

Tetenal Colortec E-6

Epson v850 Pro

Adobe Photoshop Elements 2019

 

20210124_02_007-2

contax tvs

kodak ektachrome

San Francisco, 1991. Pentax MX; Kodak Ektachrome film

Kodak Ektachrome

Austin, Texas

Photo by Richard Creed

ЛОМО LCA +

Kodak ektachrome 64 epr XPRO

Exp.04/2007

                

Tumblr / Lomography

During the first meeting of the Nederlandsch-Indische Sterrekundige Vereeniging (Dutch-Indies Astronomical Society) in the 1920s, it was agreed that an observatory was needed to study astronomy in the Dutch East Indies. Of all locations in the Indonesia archipelago, a tea plantation in Malabar, a few kilometers north of Bandung in West Java was selected. It is on the hilly north side of the city with a non-obstructed view of the sky and with close access to the city that was planned to become the new capital of the Dutch colony, replacing Batavia (present-day Jakarta). The observatory is named after the tea plantation owner Karel Albert Rudolf Bosscha, son of the physicist Johannes Bosscha and a major force in the development of science and technology in the Dutch East Indies, who granted six hectares of his property for the new observatory.

Construction of the observatory began in 1923 and was completed in 1928. Since then a continuous observation of the sky was made. The first international publication from Bosscha was published in 1922. Observations from Bosscha were halted during World War II and after the war a major reconstruction was necessary. On 17 October 1951, the Dutch-Indies Astronomical Society handed over operation of the observatory to the government of Indonesia. In 1959 the observatory's operation was given to the Institut Teknologi Bandung and has been an integral part of the research and formal education of astronomy in Indonesia.

Pentax 67, KODAK E100, Model: Aly Howard

Nikon 28Ti | Nikon Nikkor 28mm f/2.8 | Kodak Ektachrome 100

 

Scanned with Nikon D810 | Negative Supply Basic 4x5 (99 CRI) | Negative Supply Film Carrier 35 MK1

 

Home developed in Arista Rapid E-6 | Jobo CPE2 Rotary Processor

  

contax TVS

kodak ektachrome

Life in Kensington Market.

Toronto, Ontario

 

Kodak Ektachrome 320T(expired in 1999, shot at 200EI)

Cross-processed in C41

Fujica Compact Deluxe with Fujinon 45mm f1.8

Epson V370

When LCD Monitors still didn't exist as in Cuba where children could obtain the same effect with human (one person=1 pixel?) flags

Larger, on black: 'Human Flags' On Black

Pentax 645NII // Ektachrome E100VS (expired)

March 2019

Tokyo, Japan

Leica CL, summicron-40/2

kodak ektachrome 100

High Force, a 21m high waterfall on the River Tees in Upper Teesdale.

A scan of a slide taken in October 1988 with an Olympus OM4 on Kodak Ektachrome.

Rolleiflex, self-developed Kodak E-2 Ektachrome, exp Feb. 1971, Tomigaya, Tokyo

Kiev 88 CM

Carl Zeiss Jena Biometar 80mm 2.8

Kodak Ektachrome ISO 100 (long expired)

Diascan / Scan from slide

Lens: Minolta MD 50 mm f/2.0

date stamped on slide September 1975

Arches in Fort Jefferson on Garden Key in the Dry Tortugas Islands of Florida. Photographed with a Contax-T rangefinder camera using Kodak Ektachrome E100 film.

There was some heavy construction works near my apartment in the summer of 2012., so one night I took an opportunity and went for a night photo-session in the middle of the parked machinery. Now, in that location, we have a nice park with fountains. Taken one night in August 2012.

 

Taken with Yashica Mat 124G camera, on expired Kodak Ektachrome EPT 160T tungsten-balanced slide film. Scanned with Canon CanoScan 8800F scanner via VueScan x64 9.5.

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.

open.spotify.com/track/4nUM7pGcTUK2pY1d2LybrT

 

ЛОМО LCA +

Kodak EPT 160T Xpro

                

Tumblr / Lomography

When in Jersey.....have a Taylor Ham, Egg and Cheese Sandwich!

 

Henrique Couto at the Pompton Queen - June 2015

Shot on FPP High Speed RetroChrome 320 color slide film / Canon T60 camera

 

Shoot film!

filmphotographyproject.com/

What does expired slide film look like? Well, it could look beautiful or might look deep fried (like the image above.)

 

It's all in the storage. This roll of 1985 Ektachrome 400 probably sat in a hot garage for a few years before being moved to the sock drawer. I shot it last week as a test for a small batch that I bought on The Bay. Took a chance as the seller had no idea how the film was stored.

 

Want that "beat up" look? Buy badly stored, expired film. Want crisp, beautiful film? Buy from the retired photographer who has the film in his freezer.

 

Image: April 7, 2015

Kodak Ektachrome 400 (expired 06/1985 - shot at 100 iso)

Processed E6 by The darkroom

Canon EOS 10s / Canon 24mm EF lens

All Film, All The Time - filmphotographyproject.com/

date stamped on slide October 1976

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