View allAll Photos Tagged process

Part of our Flickr group weekly challenge. To process and/or manipulate a picture supplied by the previous winner in the group. I edited it in Photoshop Elements 8. Feel free to comment, and please fave anything you like, I am just an amateur, so any constructive criticism is welcomed and appreciated. Original picture is Here:

www.flickr.com/photos/49296788@N05/5113210405/

Polaroid CP3 Experimental process

 

Have you ever seen something you have been imagining for days and never spoken of, suddenly represented by another artist in Flickr?? Has it ever happened to you that the type of art you do suddenly appears in your favourite artist or bands´ artwork without them having possibly known? This sort of coincidence is known as Synchronicity but a group of artists and I have been observing the amount of times these coincidences happen. It has happened at least once to almost every person. This is a glimpse of what the scientific term of Collective Unconscious means and how it permeates reality, as science has shown before. The experiment we are about to embark on is based not on promoting synchronistic phenomena but merely on registering each time this happens until we have a large list of these synchronistic phenomena and can find general common factors. There is a place where all thoughts from everyone come together, the place where we dream things that happen or that dont, the place of beauty and art, our dreams. If this has happened to you, you would be helping an ongoing investigation if either you just mentioned it has happened to you (the mere affirmative has statistical value) or you kindly described your case as a comment on this journal. I will let all those who participate know the final result.

Tamales are in the pot cooking

cross processing filter B02

a little preview of some inking

Ektachrome cross processed

Sunrise in Napa Valley.

The U of M cheerleaders

Much cuter with an empty mouth. I waited til she was done with her cookies and then got this cute shot of her. Okay I admit it, I helped speed up the process by eating a few of them myself. :)

Western Mass Food Processing Center, Greenfield, MA

Processed with VSCO with acg preset

*just a variation to the color one!

Process of trying out the glue wig method for Keta.

Playing in Pixinsight

Processed with VSCO with x1 preset

This is a close-up of the processor. I am about to push down the lever to lock it in place.

Processed with VSCOcam with b1 preset

Please - no awards, photos, group invites or graphics!

Please do not use this image on a website without explicit permission from me. Thanks.

Oct 18, 2006 at 16:18 JST

Yanaka, Tokyo (台東区谷中・よみせ通り)

2023-365-098

I spent today at a 1-1 workshop trying out film processing and printing using a seaweed developer made out of local bladderwrack. I processed a 35mm film of images I took, and a 120 film. I learnt how the 120 film is wrapped while I was unwrapping it in the dark to put on the spool.

This was the best print from the day. We did try another image with another batch of developer; but each batch is different and the images were cooked a bit too much.

The workshop was at a local darkroom with an artist who is exploring ways of making photography more sustainable and less reliant on harmful chemicals. We did use commercial stop and fix solutions due to time constraints.

File name: 08_06_003749

 

Title: Parade, Labor Day

 

Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)

 

Date created: 1917 - 1934 (approximate)

 

Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.

 

Genre: Glass negatives

 

Subjects: Parades & processions; Anniversaries

 

Notes: Title from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.; Date supplied by cataloger.

 

Collection: Leslie Jones Collection

 

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

 

Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.

 

Preferred citation: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.

   

captures from a processing(.org) sketch

Processed with VSCO with f1 preset

1 2 ••• 56 57 59 61 62 ••• 79 80