close up on a fern
Taken while walking along one of the trails near Monticello.
Camera: Fuji GW670II. Film: Fuji Provia 100F.
Taken while walking along one of the trails near Monticello.
Camera: Fuji GW670II. Film: Fuji Provia 100F.
Not long ago we went walking out in Walnut Creek park here in Charlottesville. As always I had a camera, and as is increasingly usual, I had my Fuji GW670 with me. I only get 10 shots per roll of film in this format, so I had to make them count. And for the most part, I think I did. Film was Fuji Provia 100f, a transparency film.
We adopted a dog. Her name is Rose. And because of my flexible schedule, I spend a lot of time walking her, which is to say I spend a lot of time photographing her. Here are a few of those photographs, all taken with a Fuji X100f and edited in-camera.
Taken during a recent trip to Los Angeles, California, while walking down Pacific Beach and Venice Beach. Shot with a Fuji GW670II loaded with Kodak T-MAX 400 and using a yellow-orange filter.
Taken during a recent trip to Los Angeles, California, while walking down Pacific Beach and Venice Beach. Shot with a Fuji GW670II loaded with Kodak T-MAX 400 and using a yellow-orange filter.
Taken during a recent trip to Los Angeles, California, while at UCLA. Shot with a Fuji GW670II loaded with Kodak T-MAX 400 and using a yellow-orange filter.
Taken at the University of Virginia and around Charlottesville. Shot with a Nikon L35AF using Fuji Velvia 100 transparency film.
I was briefly in St. Louis to give a talk, and had a chance to take a few photos in one of the older parts of the city. My Leica M5 was my weapon of choice, equipped with my 50mm M-Hexanon f/2 lens. I used T-MAX 400 film, without any kind of filter.
I’ll just comment, real quickly, that I was shocked by the level of abandonment and neglect I saw in St. Louis. It honestly surpasses anything I’ve seen in say Baltimore or parts of Philadelphia.
Snapshots with my Leica M5, a 50mm lens, and some Kodak T-MAX 400.
Taken in Charlottesville in the Woolen Mills neighborhood. Camera was a Fuji GW670II and film was Kodak T-MAX 400.