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D800 test images.
Camera: NIKON D800
Lens: AF VR Zoom 28-300mm f/3.5-5.6G IF-ED
Focal Length: 28mm
Aperture: F9
ISO: 100
Shutter: 1/125 sec.
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The brand-new Symfony development workflow unveiled by Fabien Potencier at the Symfony Live Paris 2014 conference.
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My workflow leaves something to be desired. Here I am trying to work on produce table designs, but I keep getting sidetracked- for example, by copying a Joni Mitchell CD cover.
© István Pénzes.
Please NOTE and RESPECT the copyright.
7th., March 2010, Distagon 50mm at the closest distance.
Hasselblad 503CW
Carl Zeiss Distagon 4.0/50
Kodak T-max 100
T-max developer 8 min. @ 19 Celsius
Coolscan 9000
So this is actually kind of fun I guess. This is my C41, color film workflow so far. It's been a bit of trial and error trying to maintain a consistent 102F for 3.5 min.
This is how I do it so far. Put water in this pot just enough to cover the 250ml of liquids in the measuring cups. Put pot on stove with flame on high to get a good rolling boil. Once it gets boiling, reduce flame to medium. When the temp in cups gets to about 95F, turn off heat otherwise the temp gets too hot and it takes longer to cool off than to heat up. Remove cups from water when they reach 102F. First step is just water for 1 min to heat up film and tank. This helps maintain temp for developer. 2nd, developer for 3.5 min. Developer will cool to about 95F in that amount of time which isn't good. So I put the tank in the water pot in between agitations. Keeps the temp from falling too fast. 3rd step is the bleach/ fix (blix) for 6.5 min. The good thing is that you can be between 95 and 105F for this step. 4th is wash for 1 min followed by stabilizer for 1.5 min. Done!
Also, I have always used Kodak black and white developers like HC110, D76 and Xtol for b&w film. To shake things up a bit and keep it interesting, I got some Rodinal. Never used it before and still haven't. Good times. This is definitely a labor of love.
Update: Roll number 3 following this method turned out some funky greenish colors on Portra 160. Not sure why. I'll keep this photo updated.
Cannes is a city located on the French Riviera. It is a commune located in the Alpes-Maritimes department, and host city of the annual Cannes Film Festival, Midem, and Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. The city is known for its association with the rich and famous, its luxury hotels and restaurants, and for several conferences. On 3 November 2011 it hosted the 2011 G20 summit [Wikipedia.org]
The 2nd app in my workflow I use is Photogene... More on how I use it at:
digitalchemicals.blogspot.com/2014/02/ipad-photography-wo...
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About. Me - about.me/edwardconde
Take a look at this week’s featured workflow, by Luís Miguel Braga. To be honest, this is the most comprehensive workflow we’ve seen so far (... read more)
Uploaded via tarpipe.
I got inspired into some intense nerding this week. The above is a peek into the results. For more, check out the writeup on my blog.
Capsule summary: you can make an image have pretty much any histogram you like, with a little perl code—even a histogram that resembles the image itself. What you see here is:
1. An unaltered image of Miami.
2. The histogram of that image.
3. A new desired histogram made by tracing the silhouette of the skyline in the source image.
4. An altered version of the source image, which has the desired histogram.
Man was that fun to pull off.