another car show
Earlier this year, the boy and I went to a little car show near Crozet, Va. I only recently scanned and edited the negatives. Here are the keepers from a roll of Kodak Ektar, shot on a Yashica-D medium format camera.
Earlier this year, the boy and I went to a little car show near Crozet, Va. I only recently scanned and edited the negatives. Here are the keepers from a roll of Kodak Ektar, shot on a Yashica-D medium format camera.
I spent a little while this week going through about three months’ worth of photos from my Leica M10-D. These were about half of the keepers. The first few are from a recent trip to New York, the bottom few are from a news conference for unionizing workers in town.
For these photos, I used the M-Hexanon 28mm f/2.8 lens.
And for these, I used the Voigtlander Heliar 75mm f/1.8 lens and the Nokton 35mm f/1.4 lens.
I picked up a box of Kodak Pro Image 100 and spent most of the last month trying to finish a roll. I just got the scans back from my local lab (I have long since sold my 35mm scanner) and after a spending a little time with them, I think I have my keepers. I used a 90s-vintage Nikon point and shoot.
I was going through old negatives looking for a particular photo and, in addition to the picture in question, I found a lot of stuff that I really liked. Here are the best of those photos, which were taken with a camera I no longer own. I believe the film is Kodak T-MAX 400, which for awhile was my preferred choice for black and white. These were all taken in either 2017 or 2018. I should say that the camera in question, a Fuji medium format rangefinder, was very large and very heavy, and I’m honestly surprised I brought it so many places.
These are photos from the last two months that don’t really fall into any particular category, other than that I like them and want to share them with y’all. I took them with my Yashica-D (which has not been getting much use lately) using either Kodak Ektar for color or Ilford XP2 Super for black and white. Developed by my local lab and scanned at home.
Inspired by Lee Friedlander, taken using a Yashica-D camera. Color photos are Kodak Ektar, black and white are Ilford XP2 Super.
I have exactly one 35mm camera — a Nikon compact from the early 1990s — and I have been using it a ton lately. The fact that there’s not much to do with it other than point and shoot is, at this moment in my life, very appealing. I put a roll of Ilford XP2 Super into it last month and recently got the results back. Here are a few of the keepers.
I actually just finished a roll of color film this week, so I may update this post with a few of those photos when I get the scans back from my lab.
Mostly stuff seen while walking or biking around town.
These first two photos were taken during our brief trip down to South Carolina for the Thanksgiving holiday. We met a guy with a very cool 1950s era Chevy, and he let me take a few photos. I somehow missed focus on the photo of his car, but my photo of him came out pretty well. The second photo is just of a fire hydrant, but it’s a good fire hydrant, I think! I shot both with my Leica M10-D and a 35mm Voigtlander lens.
These next four photos were taken years ago, in 2016, using a Fuji X100T I have long-since sold. I’ve been going back and re-editing old photos, just to see how my current sensibilities fit with my old work. Most of the photos I took back then were pretty bad. But these four are, I think, worth sharing. The original edits were color, and I’ve converted most of these to black and white. The one that I kept in color, I toned down the vibrancy and lifted the shadows.
My latest camera acquisition is a little Nikon point and shoot from the early 1990s. It is pocket-sized with a sharp 28mm len. I consider it a companion of sorts to my Leica M10, something to keep on me when I’m shooting with a digital camera. Anyway, I put a roll through it last month, and these are a few of the keepers. I used Kodak T-Max 400 film.