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“Printed Word”
corner of an old nursery rhymes book,
within 2 3/4 inches, yes size matters! ;-P
Jiggety-jog!
HMM everyone!
People may hear your Words,
but they feel your Attitude.
( John C. Maxwell )
😄 HAPPY MACRO MONDAY TO EVERYONE 😄
Quote (by Meher Baba) typed into a text field in “WORD”
(< 2” x 2” incl. neg. space) printed with an inkjet printer on paper and
taken a macro of on August 8th, 2019, uploaded for #MacroMondays #PrintedWord
ƒ/2.8
4.5 mm
1/5 Sec
ISO 400
Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)
The orchid is backlit by a softbox acting as a scrim - a snoot is providing additional light on the center of the main orchid.
Toyo 45G View Camera Fujinon A 240mm f/9. Ilford FP4+ @125. 1/60 sec f/16 ASA 125.
Standard development in Ilfosol-3 @1:9 dilution.
Printed on Ilford MG Fiber Classic - Glossy. Ilford MG Developer @1+9. Six seconds exposure with dodging of the central petals and 3 seconds burning of the leaves and stem.
Despite taking all of the expected measures, my developing time for this contact print was uncomfortably fast. I have ordered some silver chloride photo paper, which is much slower, and I may experiment with one of the old school developers...
This is a scan of the Salt Print of the wet plate collodion negative I made 2 days ago as a test for this process.
This print is on Bergger COT 320 paper, and gold toned.
When you visit West Wittering you must take a few shots of the beach huts as it is a rite of passage for any photographer! They are looking a bit tatty at the moment after the winter storms.
© This photograph is copyrighted. Under no circumstances can it be reproduced, distributed, modified, copied, posted to websites or printed or published in media or other medium or used for commercial or other uses without the prior written consent and permission of the photographer
Feeling the Atmosphere in the History of the Film Festival
Interesting to see bronze hand prints of most of the celebrities on the Allee des Stars.It was somewhat like the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the US.
A selection of palm prints near the popular Palais des Festivals for the cinephiles & music lovers.
Cinephilia and Filmmaking ... Cannes April 2017
Salt Print. Hasselblad 501CM with 180mm CF T* and Kodak T-Max 100 (ASA 50) developed in Rodinal 1:50. Digital negative made with Pictorico Premium OHP Transparency Film. Printed on Hahnemuhle Platinum Rag under Edwards Engineering 18x20 UV lightbox for 8 minutes. Borders masked with Scotch removable Magic Tape.
Villa Rosa
(photo from my black and white fine art architecture series)
Most of my photographs are available for sale as high quality print.
Visit my webshop with worldwide shipping: fineartamerica.com/profiles/rob-blok
Salt Print toned with Selenium 1:50.Intrepid Mk2 8x10 with Fujinon f/5.6 300 CM-W and Ilford HP5+ developed in PMK Pyro. Digital negative made with Pictorico Premium OHP Transparency Film. Printed on Hahnemuhle Platinum Rag under Edwards Engineering 18x20 UV lightbox.
Salt Print. Hasselblad 501CM with 180mm CF T* and Kodak T-Max 100 (ASA 50) developed in Rodinal 1:50. Digital negative made with Pictorico Premium OHP Transparency Film. Printed on Hahnemuhle Platinum Rag under Edwards Engineering 18x20 UV lightbox for four minutes. Borders masked with Scotch removable Magic Tape.
Lake Lucerne
near Weggis LU
Schweiz
Hasselblad 503 CW, Makro Planar 4/120 mm, Ilford FP4+
Lithprint onto unknown Baryta paper
Cropped to portrait format to fit my A4 scanner
I'm still discovering old prints in my basement.
Vandyke brownprint from digitized film negative printed on vellum paper. Contact printed for 3 minutes in direct sunlight.
Photo taken with Brownie box camera: Six-16 Brownie
Film: Verichrome Pan 616 (2.5" x 4.25" negatives), expired in 1975
Developing: Caffenol-C
OK, what is this? While sitting across from this "mix of stuff" I realized it was an interesting juxtaposition of the old, the new, and some of the tools used. In the foreground an old print of an old friend sits. She happens to be painting her mailbox at the time, and the time was mid 1970's. A b/w 8x10 print I shot on a Minolta SRT102 on Kodak Tri-X film which I had processed and printed in a darkroom I had built in my basement.
Off in the distance, "the new," a new b/w image matted and framed, and awaiting to be wrapped up and given as a gift. That one shot on the Nikon you see on the right.
The tools in the middle, an old Canon 50D, and still very useable, and many of the photos of mine seen here on Flickr were shot with it. Mounted on it is one of Canon's best L lenses, their 24-105, F/4 lens. To the right of that sits our Nikon D850, an absolute joy of a camera, and on it sits our go-to 24-70 F/2.8 Nikon lens.
As I sat and looked at all this I thought it be an interesting time machine of a shot, nothing special maybe, but interesting to me. This shot was done on an iPhone.
Classic lumen print on warmtone silver gelatine paper.
Bought this old Fotokemika paper on a Swedish net auction site. Emaks K 888 UB 24x30 cm, claimed to be unopened. It probably wasn't, as it was heavily fogged, even for lith printing. But Ag + UV light never goes wrong.
There's almost no scenario when silver gelatine papers are not usable. The last resort is lumen printing, which worked out well also in this case (warmtone papers being more "photogenic" than cold tone papers).
Photogram using a Fresh Fern + Sunlight + Silver gelatine paper, 30 min in Swedish evening sunlight.
No developer. No stop bath. No fix. No toning. Just Sun and Silver.
PS borders.
Heading out to the Bangkok Comic Con :D Hope I can get some decent shots. Catch you guys in the evening! Later! :)
Rodenstock imagon lens with TriX in rodinal
Printed on Adox
Developer: Moersch Sepia
Toning: Cobalt 2 min. Iron 2 min. (more or less)
the dry print was a bit darker than when he got out of the bath.
Lumen print using 11x14" Ilford MGFB warmtone photo paper.
"I see your face in every flower
Your eyes in stars above
It's just the thought of you
The very thought of you
My love" - Ray Noble from the song The Very Thought of You
Macro Mondays and "Printed Word"
I was looking around the house for an old newspaper as I hadn't bought one for quite a while and I came across an edition of "Photography News" which is a free newspaper which can be picked up at certain outlets including Jessops which is still open in the nearby town of Horsham.
Once I had found it I started flicking through the pages to find a word/composition I liked. After locating a section with some words and a photo I noticed a paragraph containing photographic abbreviations and decided to make it a depth of field shot as these abbreviations all seemed to line up together.