kenj8246
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The blacks are "black" and the whites are "white" that's for surer and everything else in between looks darn nice also. Pyro has done it's magic. It looks like you didn't have toooooo much coffee before going there. Some cameras are easier to hand-hold than others and I've always found the bigger/heavier the better for me. Of course, that's just me. JohnW
Thanks John. I agree with you on the larger cameras being easier to handhold low SS. My keeper rate on these rolls was about 50% I was trying to hold 1/8 second, not easy sometimes.
Those look very good Ken. The lighting may have been low but it's pretty good light. The shots exhibit that beautiful tonality that MF can give compared to 35mm, although I can't imagine using a Mamiya 7 as my daily shooter. I'm a wimp when it comes to that. Spot on comment about the other website too. Gear, gear, gear!
I'm guessing that 1 and 4 were from the Mamiya? Whoops, I now see that your flickr link has them all listed as from the Mamiya.
For a number of years I have owned an ancient Bilora shoulder support (essentially a column that attaches to the tripod fitting with a bakelite curved support at the other end that you press on to your shoulder). I have found this invaluable for shooting at low shutter speeds and can be pretty sure that, at 1/8, the image will be sharp and vibration free. Oftentimes, I will expose two frames (to be on the safe side) and both are fine. It has helped me so much that I now use it all the time. It has freed me up from my previous use of a tripod meaning that I can spend much more time walking about looking for images without getting tired.
I am sure it would be pretty easy to make one and then keep in your bag if you are presented with a scene that requires such low shutter speeds.
Bests,
David
www.dsallen.de
Nice. I too like PMK Pyro with HP5. I just had a thought that since many places will not permit a tripod, perhaps a monopod which might also be rejected but probably one of those small folding seats often seen at golf tournaments might be accepted. You could probably rig one of the Bogen gagets to the handle as a tripod. Limp a little to justify needing the seat.
One of my personal favorite images was also with a very slow shutter speed in a museum in Florence, Italy but I was able to brace myself against a wall.
Http://www.jeffreyglasser.com/
Unless this thread is simply an excuse to show your images (scanned negatives or scanned prints?), the question you subtly posed seemed to be about the use of post fix developer bath. I develop 120 and sheet almost exclusively in PMK Pyro and stopped using the post many years ago with no regrets. I suggest you try it both ways and judge for yourself.
...Disposable nitrile gloves are
cheap.
The whole "worry and stress" over PMK and other Pyro developers when it comes to safety is quite silly, for the simple
reason that if "used according to the chemical product label", it is a perfectly safe product. I have used pyro for years
and always follow the label recommended usage directions-after all, they are there for a reason! USER SAFETY.
As my usernames suggests, I am an aerial applicator-a cropduster, and I work with chemicals every day-with great care
for public and environmental safety, and basically, I take the same approach with photo chemicals. If the product label says
to "use nytrile gloves, wear a respirator when mixing, use a lab apron, use in a well ventilated area"...then DO IT. The public
have a general hysteria when it comes to chemicals, but if used according to the product label, they are perfectly safe.
I'm a little tired of people drawing comparisons to the days of the past, ie the Weston comment above-sure, they may not have
known or cared about safe handling practices in his and Adams day, just like the old pesticide videos show guys mixing and loading
chemicals into aircraft with no gloves or safety glasses...but you never see that nowadays! It's illegal. Read the label and follow
directions and you'll be just fine.
Stone, your reply is rather asinine...but, enjoy the worms.
And back to our regularly-scheduled program . . .
Nice shots. If you're in central Texas lately, you had better be indoors. My all-time favorite combo is FP4+ with PMK Pyro--so luscious.
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