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Going back through some of my older images and found this one to rework. Original was from a Mamiya RZ67, 50mm lens and a 6 minute exposure on Fuji Provia, scanned on an Imacon. (The sand floor in this image is 'cottony' because other people were in the slot with me and continually walking through the frame as I exposed.) This is a recent rework of the original scan, converted to B&W and tweaked further in CS:
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Going back through some of my older images and found this one to rework. Original was from a Mamiya RZ67, 50mm lens and a 6 minute exposure on Fuji Provia, scanned on an Imacon. (The sand floor in this image is 'cottony' because other people were in the slot with me and continually walking through the frame as I exposed.) This is a recent rework of the original scan, converted to B&W and tweaked further in CS:
Love it, Jack!
Bill
Thanks for the kind words!love the tone Jack...love it in bw...can you share the camera settings?
Me too! I will try again when I get smarter.Got half way thru and my eyes glazed over...
Beautiful image! At 6 minutes and f/10 it must have been pretty dark in there, especially considering that the slide film didn't blow the highlights. Not sure if it was the latest Provia 100F emulsion (RDPIII) which has excellent long exposure reciprocity with no corrections needed up to 128 seconds. But you really nailed the exposure spot on.Thanks for the kind words!
Camera settings were Provia film normally ISO 100, but rated here at more like ISO 12 due to reciprocity, plus I used an 81C warming filter. Final exposure was was f10 for 6 minutes.
that looks really nice. i am sure the client will be happy with it. what kind of B&W treatment did you apply?I had a request for a different B&W from Monument Valley for a print so I went back to a P30+ shot I did and reprocessed it in B&W
Thanks Bill. One wonders why I like MF this is it. Tonality is one great reason but the ability to push the files to the moon is priceless. Love this stuffThat Cathedral Rock is a real winner, Guy! Talk about tonality!
Bill
From which I believe Big Rock Ale gets its name? (One of my favourite brews!)The Okotoks erratic, aka, the Big Rock (from film):
Yes, exactly. Big Rock is a brewery, and has many different brews.From which I believe Big Rock Ale gets its name? (One of my favourite brews!)
Bill