View allAll Photos Tagged squeegee

There's a brand new window squeegee in the bucket next to the gas pump so I presume this station is still in business!

I've made a semi-permanent darkroom with felt drappery.

9x12"

4 color serigraph

2006

 

This is a print I made one night while I couldn’t sleep. It’s selections from my massive reservoir of found graphics and scans I have collected over the years.

Bath time at Churchill Downs. Thoroughbred getting bath after morning workout. I've used a squeegee on windows but never on a horse. Churchill Downs, Louisville, Ky.

I could hear the plop, plop, plop of the suction cups so I knew they were near. At least my window should be cleaner until it rains tonight.

There was a crew of window washers working on the building while I was there. They would soap up a strip of window about 10 feet by 2 feet and then literally bounce across it with their squeegee's cleaning it off. These guys were "only" about 3 stories off the ground but I saw them do it across the street 5 or 6 stories up and I'm sure they'd do the same on the really high ones. I couldn't be paid enough to do this.

Se quita el papel con agua y una la ayuda de una espátula.

Remove the paper using water and a squeegee.

 

while waiting for the library to open.

The newest unadvertised tourist attraction in Toronto. And you get a free car wash!

 

Whether you drive down Dundas or pay the squeegee kids on Spadina, your windshield's gettin it.

Priority Mail sticker by Snod, seen in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He says "It's time to squeegee your third eye clean."

This is Squeegee- and as you can see if you follow my efforts to help Tigger, the cat from Sugar Mill Gardens, I have a passion for orange kitties!

 

Squeeks was diagnosed with kidney failure a year after I took him home. (He was a stray outside where I work.) $2500 later, no one knew exactly what was wrong with him, and though he nearly died, made a valliant comeback, and as long as he gets his VERY pricey pain meds, ($120 every 40 days) you would never know anything was wrong with him.

 

Squeegee is now about 11 years old. I've cherished every single day I've had with him, and he will always be my favorite pet! He's talking to me as I write this, and grumbling something about not getting tuna..... Guess it's time to feed him and his brother, Barrymore!

 

From my "Squeegee" set- please visit!

 

View On Black

 

View On Black (Large)

Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts

 

Jenkintown Building Services

 

Photo: Evelyn Taylor

This is my beautiful cat, Squeegee. I finally have a camera that can capture the colors in those eyes!

Se quita el papel con agua y una la ayuda de una espátula.

Remove the paper using water and a squeegee.

 

From the first roll I developed at home. Scratches are visible on the negative from the squeegee I ill-advisedly used to remove water from the negative...! I've improved my process a lot since I developed this.

 

Agfa APX 100 in Rodinal 1+25 for 17 minutes

This is the final product after post processing. Check out my photostream to see it's beginnings....I'm pretty proud of this one!

Some pics from the Factory Arts Custom Apparel Screen-Printing Shop.

Photos by Leeroy Rokkenrohl.

factoryarts.ca

So I've recently combined two of my favorite activities to do; freestyle rollerblading and photography. These images are what came out of that. It is a lot of fun and allows me to see a lot of interesting places and meet a lot of interesting people. Montreal is a beautiful place and my aim is to take photos that reflect it's beauty and uniqueness.

Se quita el papel con agua y una la ayuda de una espátula.

Remove the paper using water and a squeegee.

 

Prepping the first sheet of paper for aid in registration. You can see I've brought my drying rack into the studio in the upper left hand corner.

THE TABLE. Needs to be tweaked a bit to fix some unevenness. I'm afraid my squeegee's a bit too wide making it hard to push the screen down all the way. I should have bought some larger screens and such. Can't ever go too big!

I took this photo in the fall of 2000 near the SFMOMA and then in May of 2001 started working with it in the darkroom. During my graduation I gave this print to my Molecular biology teacher Allan Hansell at Saint Mary's College of California, because even in the sometimes theoretically dense world of molecular biology Allan always was good at keeping a bearing on where things were at and I thought this image captured that clarity.

 

The Technique:

35mm negative in a large full frame carrier. I used the condenser lens out of another enlarger to give the film a slightly warped look instead of a square. I exposed the paper using the enlarge and began development (90s). Once the image was well formed I squeegeed the print and then used a sponge soaked in fixer to fix the image and a splash pattern around the outside of the image (the white frame). I then flipped on the lights to expose the rest of the paper and took it through all three baths (dev, stop, fix)

This thing worked surprisingly well, it creates a "blade" of air that kind of squeegees your hands dry as you pull them out.

Colon Street, Central Havana

Date: Tue19th July 2011

Camera:Mamiya C330 + tripod

Lens: 80mm f2.8 Sekor

Meter: Paganor Spot

Film: Shanghai GP3 @ 100ASA 6x6

Developer: 6.5ml HC-110 in 500ml

Dev. Time: 15min @ 20deg

Scanner: CanoScan 9000F

 

Test run of a macro subject taken indoors with two desk lamps - exposed from 1s-9s @ f8-32(normalised to current temps with the Massive dev-chart app on the iPhone). These rolls were the first to be developed using guidance from www.rogerandfrances.com with their excellent advice on reduing fixing time with the spot-test (now down to 2-min fix) and using COLD water for washing to prevent emulsion scratching on final squeegee.

30s presoak in COLD tap-water, NO distilled water as Stourport tapwater is just fine (although remembering Roger & Francis advice to use filtered water for final wash when I move to hard-water Malvern). No stop-bath, just swill out twice with cold tap-water.

My father-in-law Gordon showed up shortly after we moved in, bucket in hand, declaring that he was going to clean all the windows inside and out. He then proceeded to do this. Where do guys like this come from?

Montech inclined plane on the Canal du Midi, 5 Aug 2004

 

This unique and frankly weird lift works like a squeegee; the two adapted railway engines are yoked together and propel that big black scraper you can see in the up position. This scrapes a triangular pond of water up the slope, and is sufficiently watertight that the boats are still afloat when they get to the top (they hope).

Contrast: filter stack Nikon UV + old Kenko Y48.

 

Mahatta's 'hand processing' has gone to the dogs. Had to wash the roll again myself.

A couple of frames still had some fixer and dye on it.

Didn't bother to rescan after cleaning the crystalline crud on the negative.

Se quita el papel con agua y una la ayuda de una espátula.

Remove the paper using water and a squeegee.

 

Se quita el papel con agua y una la ayuda de una espátula.

Remove the paper using water and a squeegee.

 

Squeegee has a beautiful bullseye pattern on his sides rather than the typical tabby stripes. He has the prettiest markings of any orange tabby I've ever seen. I know, I know...I'm biased!

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