View allAll Photos Tagged largeformatcamera
The first camera in the family
The camera of dad which I am very fond of.
Dutch:
Mijn vader gebruikte deze camera om te fotograferen ( al voor de tweede wereldoorlog) en ik veel later als vergrotingsapparaat. Wat ik nog steeds opmerkelijk vind is dat mijn vader die zuinig was toch een camera huurde (een Exacta spiegelreflex) omdat hij vond dat ik gevoel voor fotografie had.
Nu ben ik aan het kijken of ik meer te weten kan komen over de herkomst.
Mijn vader ontwikkelde zelf de glasplaten.
12R_6865XPCCN
Another photo of me testing a new lens I bought for my 4x5 Intrepid camera. The well regarded Schneider APO-Symmar 120mm f/5.6. A tiny lens considering the size of the film format! (see a photo I shared on my Instagram)(similar size to a Leica lens)
I have a cherry tree in the garden so had the 4x5 camera on top of a fully extended tripod and me on a step! The wind made it quite tough for a slow shutter so I tried to keep it at 1/60 or 1/125, f5.6 I think,
4x5 Intrepid Camera (wooden view camera) + Schneider APO-Symmar 120mm f5.6 lens + Cambo 6x9 roll film back + 120 Fomapan 100 film
I will post a full review on this camera and lens when I get chance + more test examples
Shooting macro with an 8x10 camera in the field can be somewhat awkward, but at the same time totally rewarding.
Kodak Master View 8x10 with a Fujinon W 250mm on a rather windy day by the beach.
Agfa CPG+ xray film, developed in Ilford MG paper developer (1+50) for 8'min.
Scan from a contact print on Ilford MGWT paper at grade 3.
Geeking out during rainy Saturday taking shots of my newest old camera with my newest new camera. Graflex Graphic View I meet Canon 7D.
Antes de la simbiosis mágica, la lucha del ser por no sucumbir ante los embates de lo desconocido. Esta es una foto realizada con cámara de gran formato y lente aéreo militar ruso. Papel Ilford Multigrado./ Before the magical symbiosis be fighting not to succumb to the ravages of the unknown. This is a photo taken with large format camera and military aerial russian lens. Ilford Multigrade paper
I captured this image with my 4x5 camera this past summer while backpacking with my wife and 7 year old daughter in Central Oregon's Mt. Jefferson Wilderness Area. It is one of my favorite local hikes and as you can see, this past summer was a great one for wildflowers. The night before, there was a huge lightning storm just to the south of us, which my wife and I fretted about and my daughter slept right through!
Thor's Hammer in early morning light. Taken with a 4x5 Large Format Camera on slide film.
View larger version:
www.lorigrimmett.com/2011/11/09/bryce-canyon-vista/
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Vierfach-Belichtung der Laubenbögen in der Berner Gerechtigkeitsgasse. Toyo Super 45 mit Toyo Rollfilm-Back, Ilford FP4 120, Scan vom Negativ
Quadruple exposure of the arcades in the Gerechtigkeitsgasse in the old town of Bern. Toyo Super 45 field-camera with Toyo rollfilm-back, Ilford FP4, scanned negative.
Hughenden Manor
Home of the British Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli, who lived here from 1848 to 1881
The Ice House
In 1941, Hughenden Manor was requisitioned by the Air Ministry for top-secret work. It was code-named "Hillside".
Today the most popular tour at Hughenden Manor is of the Ice House – the actual location where the wartime map-makers worked.
Hughenden map makers produced maps for targets like Berlin, Hamburg and Dresden, and also for strategic missions like the Dam-Busters raid, the rocket factories at Peenemunde and the Eagle's Nest – Hitler's mountain retreat.
Because of these important activities Hughenden Manor, or "Hillside", was at the top of Hitler's hit list.
It was not until 2005 that National Trust researchers discovered details about the Ice House's actual use.
Civilian artists, architects and draughtsmen, male and female, had been recruited from all over the country and were brought to Hughenden Manor, or Hillside, to produce up-to-date bombing maps. It was here in the Ice House that the photographic element of that work took place.
Getting close to photograph the break patterns. For more information about wetlands visit my Nature Blog.
Tyntesfield House (National Trust) 8x6 Agfa X ray film in 1910 Thornton Pickard Imperial Full Plate camera. Negative photographed on a lightbox with a Canon EOS50D, inverted in photoshop and lightly edited in Lightroom
Shot with Wista 45N large format camera on Fuji Provia 100 film. The exposure was 1/125s at F22 on a Fujinon 135 lens.