Wow, HiHo, nice! This has a look to it that almost looks unreal. Like an unbelievable high definition ink drawing. I guess that is that NW moss, you referred to in @Brad Bireley PA forest, all over every rock giving them real/unreal texture. And the shutter setting perfect for those limitless fingers of water. I especially like the up and out splash over on the right side. What is the vegetation in the upper right - fir or some kind of rhododendron? hard to tell with apug resolution. I find just about everything you have been putting up here done with the HiHoPyro dance has come out terrific looking in scans. From what i have read, it will really make it's finest hour especially with roll film in silver prints.
Hi Michael, Some of the shots are slower shutter speeds - 1 sec, if I recall. They gave the normal creamy flow, but gave less of the energetic water flying around which seemed more in light w/ the close shot of all the spray. What looks like layers of leaves in the upper right are ferns, drooping down w/ the weight of water. The smaller, almond-shaped leaves I don't know about - I'm not very brigtht about my flora. I see a waterfall & instantly think of shots from Andrew, Tony, rmann & yourself. When subtle tone separation is needed in a less busy composition, I wonder if the HC-110 semi might bring something to the party. It was lower on contrast, but did tones quite well at 1:150.
Low dilution semi stand is not the be all end all. I do semi stand with pyrocat but not diluted. The way I do it is to judge the SBR and then adjust the ISO and development times accordingly. Some dev times are say 15 min's and others >=30 min's. In each case I agitate for 15 sec's at the beginning and then 10 sec's half way through. This gives me great tonal range and easily printed/scanned negs.
rmann, thank You. You have many of the spectacular waterfall shots, so getting that right in your estimation is particularly sweet. Andrew, Tony & Michael are the other guys that have done superb waterfalls. I tend to look at your work for composition & figure alot of experience will fill in the blanks of handling the range & speeds. Thanks again for looking & especially about the speed.
Hi Eric. I know there's no magic bullet, but I've sure been happy w/ PyroHD. I've not learned to measure SBR, much less how to adjust dev accordingly. If you know of links you find helpful/respectable, It would be no small help. I appreciate your thoughts on using Pyro differently. On this, I was scaling contrast back a fair amount.
JP, Thank You. I usually like the longer shutter also, and have one that's a little longer. Its a more peaceful, calming look. Here, the stair-step cascade was a bit energizing for me, so I'm glad it got some of that action. I can't really claim to have water movement/shutter speeds mastered or even well in hand. A few things were lucky about this one - and unlucky.
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