View allAll Photos Tagged zigzag
Floris Jespers - Zigzag.
Exposition at Campo & Campo (Berchem, Belgium).
Floris Jespers - Zigzag.
Exposition at Campo & Campo (Berchem, Belgium).
A recreation of a zigzag fence picture I took at Ellanor C. Lawrence park.
Took a risk and bought a Minolta XD11 at an antique store; deal was as-is and included an expired roll of Kodak Ultramax 400 that the previous owner had left in the bag.
Went ahead and bought it hoping all would turn out well. Loaded some TMax 100 to re-create some of my other pictures for comparison, all good!
Minolta XD-11
Minolta Rokkor 50mm f/1.7 MD
Kodak TMax 100
Developed with HC-110 dilution B
IDS Tower, Minneapolis. I was inspired by William Fuller's pictures of cityscapes that were featured in a recent issue of Lenswork while wandering to a class at the IBM building.
When I was at Roxham Farm a few weeks ago I went looking for what I heard was the oldest maple tree in Quebec. Someone told me where it was (go right at the road, turn left into the woods, follow the path, etc…) but I never did find it. On the way there I saw this zigzag fence.
This pathway leading from a Chinese temple on a small island in Jade Lake at Chateau Montelena Winery has built-in protection for the guests after they complete a wine tasting.
I wonder if they think that they are walking a straight line?
This photo was taken by a Kowa/SIX medium format film camera with a KOWA 1:5.6/110 lens and Hoya Skylight 1-b ø67 filter using Kodak Portra 160 film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitally rendered with Photoshop.
This was taken with my Samsung phone and I applied an effect trying to make it look more interesting. It does have lots of zigzags though...
When we first hiked 400m up a hill in Kâtkâvaara, Finnish Lapland, to see the northern lights, our guide pointed out north and told us that was the direction the lights would come from. Then we turned south and saw this! The lights stretched from horizon to horizon that night…it was stunning.