Rayt
Subscriber
Nice values!
Thank you. I owe that to upbringing and three years in the Boy Scouts.
Nice values!
www.bigfoottrail.org
New Instax back for my RZ67II! (Big picture is latest batch of SX-70 Polaroid)
View attachment 421625
About seven-ish years ago, I decided for no reason I can articulate to start shooting some film again after an almost 20-year digital-only hiatus. So I bought a Mamiya Press Universal -- not quite as far from a modern electronic camera as you can get, but close.
I was still learning its wonders and (considerable) foibles when my elderly aunt and uncle called me to ask if I was available to drive their car from the San Francisco Bay Area to their new home in northern Washington state. Take the long way if you want, they said, and thus began a 6-day road trip up the Pacific Coast.
It was fall, and I was traveling during the work week, so I had many beaches and trails to myself, or nearly so. That trip is still a treasured memory.
Just after dawn one morning near La Push, WA, I hiked out to Second Beach. It was raining lightly, and misty, and it was just me and the gulls. A small creek, nameless as far as I can tell, was flowing off the coastal ridge, through the sand, and into the ocean. There's nothing like solitude, a misty morning, and nothing but the sounds of the ocean.
I struggled a fair bit with the Universal, which I had never used in the rain before and was trying to keep dry with a plastic bag. Of course, the bag was blowing all over the place -- into the lens, blocking the viewfinder etc. A Mamiya Press camera is pretty old school -- you have to remember many small things, and do them in the right order, to get a picture on film without getting a blank frame, a double exposure, exposing your film to open light, and who knows how many other disasters. The gulls heard quite a copious volume of rather rude language that morning.
But eventually I made an exposure. I had many failures with that camera on that trip, and I was pretty dubious about this shot, too. But to my surprise, it turned out to be my favorite picture of the trip, and that morning is one of the best I've ever spent.
Cropped from 6x9. Mamiya Universal, 100mm f/3.5, TMY-2.
View attachment 421889
Ore Dock in Marquette, Michigan.
Mamiya RB67 Pro SD
K/L 127mm lens
Hand held with a yellow or orange contrast filter
Ilford HP5+ developed in Black White and Green developer by Flic
Scanned on an Epson 850 flat bed
View attachment 423303
Ore Dock in Marquette, Michigan.
Mamiya RB67 Pro SD
K/L 127mm lens
Hand held with a yellow or orange contrast filter
Ilford HP5+ developed in Black White and Green developer by Flic
Scanned on an Epson 850 flat bed
View attachment 423303
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