Test shot on Portra 400 inside book store to see how all the different colors rendered. Turned out pretty good for my tastes. Corners are a bit soft. I have no idea what f stop it was at but I'd guess wide open or close to it.
geekcop wrote:
Now for something totally different.
Test shot on Portra 400 inside book store to see how all the different colors rendered. Turned out pretty good for my tastes. Corners are a bit soft. I have no idea what f stop it was at but I'd guess wide open or close to it.
geekcop wrote:
Now for something totally different.
Test shot on Portra 400 inside book store to see how all the different colors rendered. Turned out pretty good for my tastes. Corners are a bit soft. I have no idea what f stop it was at but I'd guess wide open or close to it.
The "shelfie" was from the first test roll in the camera. I'm a little behind in my developing and scanning. I have 6 rolls waiting to be developed and two waiting currently to be scanned. The AF Slim works fine was the takeaway from this roll even if it took quite a while (read months) to get to that conclusion.
Thank you. I really appreciate that. The day we arrived there was very dense fog that hung just at the tops of the buildings. It made the whole city grey, cold and wet. Lighting was as flat and diffuse as could be. The exterior photos were taken that day. The one of the "stained glass" windows were taken on another day that was much brighter outside. The Kentmere did pretty well under these less than ideal conditions. Edinburgh was an incredible city to visit and I recommend it to anyone who wants to step back in time.
The two boulders on the left are the Drifter/Smoking Boulder and the Lower Smoking Boulder. In the center are the massive 50+ foot Grandma and Grandpa Peabody boulders. The smaller block on the far right is the appropriately named Peewee Boulder.
Nikon FM2n, AI Nikkor 50mm f/1.8S, Kentmere Pan 400, developed in LegacyPro L110 at 1:31 for 5.5 minutes.