Martin, wonderful tones and a really interesting framing with the deep shadow on your second shot. Thanks for sharing your findings about different films on your web-site, did a bit of reading there several times.
Tom, what kind of developer are you using for Acros? Sometimes I think - no offense meant - that the images are a bit harsh contrast-wise. Maybe just a matter of personal taste.
Martin, wonderful tones and a really interesting framing with the deep shadow on your second shot. Thanks for sharing your findings about different films on your web-site, did a bit of reading there several times.
Tom, what kind of developer are you using for Acros? Sometimes I think - no offense meant - that the images are a bit harsh contrast-wise. Maybe just a matter of personal taste.
Martin, wonderful tones and a really interesting framing with the deep shadow on your second shot. Thanks for sharing your findings about different films on your web-site, did a bit of reading there several times.
Tom, what kind of developer are you using for Acros? Sometimes I think - no offense meant - that the images are a bit harsh contrast-wise. Maybe just a matter of personal taste.
Gary, wonderful scenery captured on 5x7!
I use Kodak HC110, dilution E, 7 mins, inverting the first minute and then 10 seconds each additional minute.
From my first roll out of a Horizon 202 camera. Looks like I didn't quite mount the film correctly, causing the blur on the right-hand side. This is from a communal park in my neighborhood. Expired Kodak Gold 200 film, scanned on a Nikon Coolscan 9000 with Vuescan software.
Another shot from the same roll out of the Horizon 202, showing more clearly the cause of the blur on the right-hand side. Apparently I missed a roller putting in the film leader.
Picture shows my backyard.
Congrats to your Horizon, Paul. My first roll with a 202 was partially blurred too ;-) Good to see that the exposure is even across the whole frame (a typical failure on some older swing-lens-cameras).