..she would wake up only for the next rain, suppose ...nice image
Nicely captured, do you develop your film or send it to a lab? Were you trying to control the shadows with your use of f/8 aperture?
I do not do my own film processing at present but I hope to get my wet darkroom set up soon. The lab I send my film to is Praus Productions in Rochester, NY
Ektar is a bit more tolerant of higher exposures than it is with low light, I know I could have shot this at Sunny 16, but the f/8 brought the exposure into a range where most of the dark textures of the tree bark were preserved.
Last edited by Shadowman; 7th January 2016 at 07:31 PM.
Anyone seeing a thumbnail sized image in this thread should transfer to this one before commenting on that topic.
Some people see thumbnails
Thanks in advance, Dave
Definitely !
What I also like about Praus is their online ordering. Unlike many other labs that only offer a form that needs to be printed and by hand filled out with the processing order, Praus handles everything through their web site. All I do to ship off film is note the order number in and on the flat rate shipping box that are provided by the USPS.
They can handle 35mm to 11x14 film for Kodak Q-Lab Certified E-6 and B&W, they can handle 35mm to 8x10 for C-41 color negative film, they can do push and pull processing, B&W and RA-4 Color Prints, as well as Proof prints, and they also have scanning services.
Just check out their Services and Pricing pages.
My 120 roll film is returned un-cut and I do my own scanning with a Canon CanoScan 9000F Mark II, typically at 4800 PPI 48 Bit/Pixel.
Last edited by Steaphany; 7th January 2016 at 10:40 PM.
When you go to the Ordering Services page, scroll down to the specific process, I often do C41, followed by selecting the film format, 120, C-41 Film Processing for example, you have the option to choose Process Specifications as shown here:
Additionally, when completing the order submission, you have a text field for Special Instructions so you can request some craziness.
Interesting topic about films...but I've gone digital so I can't comment on this what I am ignorant of. But I like your image and the title is catching.
Steaphany,
She does give the impression of sleeping. I like how the branches form a diagonal from bottom left to top right.
I wonder if she's waiting for your garage to finish migrating.
Sergio
This tree and the migrating garage are, at present, about 30 miles from each other. So, I'm suspecting this tree is just dreaming of Spring when the Sun will start to warm things up.
For me, I never lost the latency of film photography. When I shoot digital, I don't post process the images for at least a week or two. So, this has never been an issue for me.