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This one is for the Bug for Christmas. I still need to do the finer features- mane, horns, tails and eyes.
Lace Négligée with Flowers Photo Shoot Arch Street Studio Philadelphia Kodak 5053 T-MAX 400 Professional TMY 35 mm B&W Contact Sheet Proof Print Aug 1994
Is there anything better than new sheets? Only new sheets on a super comfy bed with the windows open and breezes blowing the curtains. When I look at this it smells like fresh laundry. :)
Also... I freakin' love the Olympics. I am super excited about them.
avenir passé - self46, Montpellier, October
(detail of the contact sheet, not a film scan)
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July 1, 2021 - (2015)
This is made from 4" HST blocks, with four blue-tone sheet fabrics on solid white. All of these are thrifted sheets - nice and soft. This finished size is about twin-bed sized, but I'll use it as a throw on the couch for summer.
I've always loved looking at contact sheets but it's something that you don't see a lot of now with digital cameras being so popular etc.
Here's a full roll from my Mamiya C330. Tri-X pushed to 1600, HC110, 16mins, 20C.
Several sheets of these tiles came into our possession. Really beautiful. We don't have a plan to use them . . . yet.
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Local building site, each beam making the thing look like a contact sheet nighttime. Soon, the interior will be hidden by a facade, like for most of us I reckon. Bringing a tripod next time. Gothenburg, October 2017. - Higher Resolution at ift.tt/2gAk6QD
He walks in the room
air reaches me
skin becomes sheets covering me
fog carves a crack
cuts open wounds
veins made of steel feed all this cold
your words are heavy
but they lack so much substance
to fall is the cure for vertigo
Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft: Deutsche Schrift, drawn by a Mr. or Ms. “Friedling” in May 1935. One of three sheets. Berlin: Reichsbahndirektion (1935). Private collection (Lars Krüger, Berlin).
This is sheet 1, with A–Z, Ä, Ö and Ü. 109 cm wide × 73 cm high.
These numbers/letters were presumably made by the Deutsche Reichsbahn (the national German train organisation) in 1935, in oder to tell sign-makers what the lettering on signs for trains stations should look like. Several Berlin S-Bahn stations still have signage that includes lettering that might have been made with this design as a guide.
The lettering does not seem to be based on any single fonts of type produced by a typefoundry. But Element – designed by Max Bittrof and published by the Bauer typefoundry of Frankfurt am Main – may have acted as a loose source of inspiration, as this seems closer to Element than to any other typeface.
Purchased at a Flea market. Free for you to use in your artwork.
Not for resale in digital or print collage sheets.
It's huge 8*10" scanning area let me to do this nice 36 frame contact sheets on the fly. It's almost the same like I did it for decades in the Darkroom. Just put a AN glass taken from a picture frame on top of the negatives and I'm done. It's so easy to judge the frames and to decide witch keepers are worth to be single-framed-scanned with a dedicated 35mm scanner. Even my simple Plustek scanner outperforms any flatbed-scanner scanning 35mm in any way except time-consumption. Contacts on the fly are as useful as they ever were and that's why I love it so much to have them back. This is the first roll taken on a 20min stroll with my new camera acquisition a Nikon F90X and the 28-105 Nikkor. It took me about 10 min to have all 36 frames with 1000ppi on the screen and see that everything is fine with this camera and lens combo. Hi res. scans? Maybe a few, maybe later on a rainy Sunday eve, meanwhile I go out and play........
BTW
Agfa APX 100 NEW @ 200 Kodak T-Max Dev 1+4 22° 8,5min
i've finally mustered the courage to cut into my vintage sheets and fabrics...half-way done with the quilt top!
Glass sheet between model and camera, with sprayed water on it and a reflection of the sky and trees in my backyard, behind me. Softbox on the left, with guide light only (no actual flash). That's how I could get balanced lighting and two different light temperatures).
Totally inspired by this awesome picture by Felicia Simion.
A better look at one of the ore loads on U724. The bolt pattern shows just how steep the slope sheets are in these cars. There won't be any trouble getting the ore pellets out of these. Byron, WI,
July 20, 2024.