For some reason this reminds me of the time my brother (who lives in Seattle) and I camped for a night on Dungeness Spit, and I mentioned it to a friend back East when I got home. She misheard me and said "you went camping in a dungeon of spit?"
It actually felt like that as it was windy and rainy.
bjhurley wrote:
For some reason this reminds me of the time my brother (who lives in Seattle) and I camped for a night on Dungeness Spit, and I mentioned it to a friend back East when I got home. She misheard me and said "you went camping in a dungeon of spit?"
It actually felt like that as it was windy and rainy.
I'm deep in the rabbit hole. Got a Hasselblad 501cm. Really enjoy the SLR. These were the test shots to make sure it focuses well / no light leaks etc. These were with the waist level viewfinder. Hard to nail focus with this viewfinder, especially close up indoors with slow shutter speeds with subjects that move and stupidly using 200 speed film (Gold 200). But I was cheap and didn't want to waste portra 800 on a test roll. I think I also shot some of these below MFD. Subsequently got the 45º prism finder and got some shots with that I am curious to see once developed. I like the overscans on the borders.
After using medium format, makes 35mm seems cheap!
You’ve been posting some awesome film stuff but these to me are another level. Nicely done!
lifeandmylens wrote:
I'm deep in the rabbit hole. Got a Hasselblad 501cm. Really enjoy the SLR. These were the test shots to make sure it focuses well / no light leaks etc. These were with the waist level viewfinder. Hard to nail focus with this viewfinder, especially close up indoors with slow shutter speeds with subjects that move and stupidly using 200 speed film (Gold 200). But I was cheap and didn't want to waste portra 800 on a test roll. I think I also shot some of these below MFD. Subsequently got the 45º prism finder and got some shots with that I am curious to see once developed. I like the overscans on the borders.
After using medium format, makes 35mm seems cheap! ...Show more →
stockshas wrote:
You’ve been posting some awesome film stuff but these to me are another level. Nicely done!
Thanks so much! I love shooting film, so that makes me happy to hear. The bad thing about having multiple film bodies with film loaded is it takes even longer to finish a roll and get developed. But I'm starting to like that. Pictures I get back I forgot I even took.
Here's a few from the one day it wasn't pouring rain during our recent visit to Depoe Bay, Oregon:
M4-2, Voigtlander 35 1.4 Nokton Classic SC V2, 022 filter, Tri-X @ ISO 200, FPP-76 1+1
These were a batch scan using Negative Lab Pro, the only adjustment was changing the tone profile to Lab Standard:
Entrance to Depoe Bay:
Devil's Punchbowl at low tide:
Cape Foulweather Lookout Visitors Center:
A closer view of Cape Foulweather Lookout Visitors Center:
One more of the Cape Foulweather Lookout Visitors Center:
madNbad wrote:
Here's a few from the one day it wasn't pouring rain during our recent visit to Depoe Bay, Oregon:
M4-2, Voigtlander 35 1.4 Nokton Classic SC V2, 022 filter, Tri-X @ ISO 200, FPP-76 1+1
These were a batch scan using Negative Lab Pro, the only adjustment was changing the tone profile to Lab Standard:
Entrance to Depoe Bay: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/53288685320_836a6c5d7d_b.jpg
Desmolicious wrote:
Very nice but love the first pic.
Thanks, It was taken from the window of our motel room. I do have to say, I am incredibly impressed with Negative Lab Pro. Processing a roll use to take hours, adjusting the camera settings for each capture then adjustments after importing. Now, I'm done in less than an hour and most of that is flipping the image orientation.
Desmolicious wrote:
NLP really was a game changer for me. Fantastic product.
+1
I didn't even shoot C-41 until NLP was available because I didn't want to deal with the post processing. I had a B&W workflow in PS that worked fine and I just stuck with transparencies for color.