Victorian Architecture,Bexhill,East Sussex.UK

Just love this white Vivtorian building, so I took some pics. The sky was clear blue, and to emphasize this fact I used a red filter combined with a polariser to darken the sky dramaticly.
Location
Bexhill on sea
Equipment Used
Nikon F100 and Nikkor 18/35
Exposure
about F11
Film & Developer
kodak Porta BW 400
Paper & Developer
C41 colour dev
Lens Filter
red and polariser
I love dark skies, never managed to achive one this dar though. Pardon my ignorance but what is EXIF info????
 
Smudge, if you right click on the image, and select "image properties" you get just that. In this case it says the copy/scan was taken on a D70.

Apart from all that I think it a fine image, although I get an impression of slight horizontal distortion.
 
As Iv'e explained earlier I did use a D70, but only to scan in the image. My film scanner is being repaired. The original pic was taken on a Nikon F100. I agree Dave there is a slight horizontal distortion, I could correct that In Photoshop but would that be allowed in APUG? Did you know Randell Webb?He wrote a book on antique photgraphic processes. We used to be members of the Richmond Photographic Society back in the eightees. regards Julian
 
I altered my post Julian, so that it says what I originally meant it to say. I use my wife's Canon digi something for the same purpose, when I need to scan large or mounted prints for the EMMG website.

We have always accepted that adjustments to scanned images sometimes need to be made to get them closer to the look of the print. So the answer to your question must be, Yes!

I have a copy of Randell's book, "Spirits of Salts" that he co-authored with Martin Reed, I met him a few times at Woking PS; quite a character.
 

Media information

Category
Standard Gallery
Added by
julian bell
Date added
View count
774
Comment count
14
Rating
0.00 star(s) 0 ratings

Image metadata

Device
NIKON CORPORATION NIKON D70
Aperture
ƒ/11
Focal length
18.0 mm
Exposure time
1/400 second(s)
Filename
bexhill_architecture_bw2.jpg
File size
229 KB
Date taken
Mon, 27 June 2005 4:49 PM
Dimensions
507px x 650px

Share this media

Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more…