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Location: Ponytail Falls, Oregon
Date Taken: Dec 2015.
Camera: Chamonix 045N-2
Film: Kodak Portra 400 (shot at speed)
Format: 4x5 (large format)
Lens: Schneider Symmar-S 210mm (Copal 1)
Shutter Speed: 12s
Aperture: f22
Development: Aker Imaging in Houston, Texas
Scanning: Scanned via drymount on betterscanning holders using an Epson v700 and Vuescan software.
Editing: Curves, levels, spot healing dust, and other minor adjustments were made in Lightroom. ColorPerfect correction was made in Photoshop.
What a difference a couple of months makes. The waterfall has dropped dramatically since March making a shot of this often visited waterfall more difficult to shoot.
This is an unusually tall Ponytail palm tree with an unusually long and thin trunk. It is close to 30 feet in height which is supposed to be the maximum height this plant can reach in the wild.
a girl jogging through what seemed a virtual tunnel of foliage, concrete and light. the pony tail swings almost hypnotically left, right, left with every stride.
Beaucarnea recurvata, the elephant's foot or ponytail palm, is a species of plant in the family Asparagaceae. The species was native to numerous states of eastern Mexico but is now confined to the state of Veracruz. Despite its common name, it is not closely related to the true palms (Arecaceae). [Wikipedia]
Holga 120 WPC view of Ponytail Falls from a month or two ago. For all the disadvantages that camera may have, one of the things I've grown to love most about it is that there's no worrying about water getting on the lens (or the body, for that matter). Heavy downpour. Relentless spray. No problem.
Exposure time for this was somewhere between four and five minutes on a dark winter afternoon.