View allAll Photos Tagged splittoning

Photograph 2011, printed 2011.

 

Hasselblad 500CM / 80mm Planar / Ilford Delta 400 / Rodinal 1+25 / 8x8" silver gelatin print on 11x14" Ilford MGIV fiber matte / replenished Ethol LPD / Moersch MT3 / Harman Selenium

Number 246 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned, macro (ish) image of a sunflower, in the evening sunshine, on a late Summer's day in Perthshire, Scotland.

The Book Cliff Range is an oddity, with the body of the hills being Mancos shale topped with a cap of Mesa Verde sandstone. It runs about 200 miles between Colorado and Utah. Since this is on BLM land, there are a lot of pressures to extract oil (from shale and tar sands), coal (although that industry is dying in the area), and as much "recreation" as can be squeezed out of it. It is a favorite destination of mountain bikers and hikers looking to see the small band of wild horses in the Little Book Cliffs.

 

In the field beyond Jesseman's

something completely different for once ;) I rarely colorgrade images ....I hope thats not too much

Hasselblad 500C - 80mm Planar f/2.8 - FP4 - Standing development in Rodinal - 1 hour

Koh Samui, Thailand 2018

Split-toned photograph of the view along the escarpment at Malham Cove. Shot using a Nikon FM2 35mm SLR and a Nikkor 24mm f/2.8 Ai-S wide-angle lens with an orange filter and a circular polariser. The film was processed as rated in Ilford Ilfotec-DDX developer and the resulting negative scanned using a Plustek 8200Ai film scanner to 16-bit DNG raw file. Processed from raw using Capture One Pro and then split-toned using LR6.

Easby Abbey, Richmond, North Yorkshire. Camera handheld, exposure 1.6 sec, intentional camera movement.

image copyright protected.

9/11 memorial. Liberty State Park. Jersey City, NJ.

Every evening all neighbourhood crows gather and fly around in circles before settling down in the trees for the night.

The setting sun created a warm orange light on the iconic castle.

 

Bamburgh beach, Northumberland

 

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments and faves.

This is the village we stayed at whilst on holiday in Wales in 2012; the cottage, which was lovely and cosy, is just hidden behind the trees on the right. The waterfall shots were taken on the same holiday.

 

There isn't much in Dinas Mawddwy, in fact apart from the post office and pub (The Red Lion, which served great food - the biggest gammon steaks I have ever seen) what you see in this shot is pretty much the entire village, but it is surrounded by beautiful Welsh countryside with walks abundant and the folk we did speak to were friendly too. One of our party lost her purse with cash and cards. We couldn't find it anywhere after walking up and down the street for half an hour. In the morning someone knocked on the door and handed it in to us!

 

Instead of the usual black and white or striking shades of green, a colour which Wales is plentiful in, I used split toning instead for something a little different to convey an aged black and white that isn't sepia. The filter blur is meant solely to focus the attention more on the buildings themselves.

Intentional camera movement (ICM) with my new Nikon Z50 and the 75-250 lens. White Butte, Saskatchewan, Canada. 5 November 2020

A bench in Aberaeron

This marker is 5 miles away from the bridge, at a roadside rest stop, but from what I could see there really is no good place near the bridge to place it. At least where it is people will occasionally see it, if they wade through the grass and the sagebrush on the roadside. (see comments below to be mystified, because there is a marker next to the bridge).

 

The Carbondale community has a Memorial Day ceremony that ends with tossing a wreath into the Roaring Fork river from the bridge.

 

Sometimes you feel overwhelmed by the relentless futility of war:

"Theirs not to make reply,

Theirs not to reason why,

Theirs but to do & die.."

Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Charge of the Light Brigade.

   

Number 252 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned, macro image of some tiny old mushrooms.

 

The effect is created by putting my camera on the ground and focusing on them through the forest undergrowth.

The new terminal area at dublin airport!

 

I always wanted to come here to get a shot of this terminal so I went today and I tried to do a 360 pano but it failed, so this is the best I could do! :) I hope you like it!

 

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Thank you for looking!

Number 179 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned, macro (ish) image of some Barley growing in the afternoon sunshine.

Happy Sliders Sunday! I played a lot with the exposure, tint, saturation, white and black balances on this.

 

Thanks for looking at the scenery with me.

A blown glass cat ornament that I brought from the glass works at Alum bay on the Isle Of Wight a few years ago.At the time we had three cats and managed to find three little glass cats in the right colours but one had a tiny flaw in the ear.So this is a macro of the flaw using a 100mm macro and 50mm reversed lens.

Hawthorn Blossom

The shattered tree is almost pure white viewed from this side and almost black on the reverse side, like it has been struck by lightning in the recent storms. There is a stark edge separating the white from the black. The trees close by are unaffected.

I had reason to take some selfies yesterday and thought I might as well post one here. I also tried a smile and a neutral visage, but they didn't look as good to me as this serious or concerned look, which some might call grumpy. 😀

 

And, what the hey. It's Mono Monday, so . . .

 

© AnvilcloudPhotography

Just for a change from the colourful images this week, I processed this a little differently. It started life as 3 hand-held bracketed RAW exposures processed as a full colour 16bit HDR. I then played around with split toning in Lightroom (olive and light blue), cranked up the contrast, blacks, clarity and sharpness and gave it a vignette before publishing.

  

Crossing these bridges has become a daily routine. But the view is actually spectacular and gets its touch of magic when seen with the right glasses from the right angle... You start to wonder if that weird line of light is a sign of life from outer space. Or is it just an airplane passing by after two minutes of exposure... You can't really tell, can you?

 

Cheers to flickr contacts Geir Vika and eskedahl for reminding me Night Time Is The Right Time...

Number 277 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned image of some smoke drifting out of the barrels of a recently fired shotgun.

 

Taken at the Scottish Schools' Clay Pigeon Competition at Cluny Clays in Fife, Scotland.

Magnolia virginiana #5

Shot on Ilford Delta 400 film (at 250ASA), processed in Xtol 1:1.

Camera: Hasselblad with the 150Mmm Sonnar lens, and a Proxar close-up filter.

This is the split toned version, effect applied in Lightroom, saved, and de-saturated.

I shot both the Kodak TMY and Ilford Delta 400 to compare these two similarly formulated films. I like the tonal distribution of the Ilford Delta a TINY bit more, but otherwise these are very similar films, and both a spectacular.

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