Standing on the shores of Loch Rannoch one evening, looking past submerged trees over to Schiehallion in the distance. Taken on the Hasselblad using Ilford FP4+ film.
Looking down the gorge from the lower bridge, Falls of Bruar . I’m particularly impressed by the colours and the smooth glistening rocks. This area is rich in geology (an extension of the Loch Tay fault?): there’s a lot of limestone and other metamorphic sedimentary rocks (layered slate, possibly some schist) and a bit of red sandstone nearby, all folded making rakish angles. Taken on the Shen Hao 5×4” large-format camera with Fuji Velvia (old RVP emulsion) film.
Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery “AFTERNOON DELIGHT” was one of the finalists chosen in the March ‘08 TREES Group Competition. The afternoon sun was at just the right angle – These trees were perfectly framed in the afternoon sunlight. Western Australia Outback.
© Lauren Hewitt www.lauren-hewitt.com
Well I’ve been uploading some pretty and colourful images for the last week or so and now I’m going to post some more of my dark landscapes again. All of this series will be infrared film images taken a couple of years ago at a friends place in the Hunter Valley. This is the first one which till now I’ve called very uninspiringly hill 5…. now its been reinvented as big hill little cow….. hope you like it
As always – click image for a better view / / A chilly morning on the Mt William range sees cloud and mist plummet off the ridgeline as the colder air sinks into the shadows of the range. Meanwhile the rising sun warms the rockfaces and slopes to the west, forcing the cold damp air to warm,rise and dry – thus lifting and dissapating the ‘downstream flow’ of this ‘waterfall of clouds’. / This ongoing spectacle continued for several hours and was a real highlight to watch and experience ! / / / / Fuji G617 – no cropping,no stitching. Velvia 100F. / ©T.Middleton2008 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—— / / / see more of my TRUE panoramic photography by clicking on the image below / /
Part of a series / This image was shot using a / mamiya 220 camera (6X6 medium format) and iLford black and white roll film.
As part of a series. This image was shot using a / mamiya 220 camera (6X6 medium format) and iLford black and white roll film. The original is printed on Ilford Multigrade IV Fiber Based Paper and this is a scan from it. No editing.
Film location for the movie - The Chronicles of Narnia – Prince Caspian Cathedral Cove – New Zealand – June 2008 / Click Here / WARNING / ©2009 Globalphotos All rights reserved. / All photographs, text and images by Globalphotos are the exclusive property of Globalphotos – protected under Australian and international copyright laws. / These images may not be reproduced, copied or manipulated without written permission. / No use for Public Domain. / Use of any image for another photographic concept or illustration is a violation of copyright. /
Part of a series / This image was shot using a / mamiya 220 camera (6X6 medium format) and iLford black and white roll film.
this is the next in my current series of uploads. All of these IR landscapes were were shot at the old Reshes site on Lachlan street in Sydney some years back when it was being demolished. I took quite a lot of photo’s of the site over a period of time but waited till the sky was just so to use the infrared film…... it just seems to bring out all the latent drama trapped within the mundane….
Late afternoon on a snowy day, County Derry, N. Ireland. Taken with a Canon EOS 50, Fuji Reala iso 100, +2 exposure compensation. Scanned, resized then post processed with levels and curves and a hint of usm. The day I took this photo, a snowy fog came down, and I lost all sense of directions. I wandered about for ages, very cold, and getting really scared.
I’m preparing a new body of work for exhibiton later in the year and am working out ways to present these images. Yesterday I posted a single image muted landscpe #2 in order to invite some responses to the way I preparing the indivdual images with a very muted colouring and now today I’m posting a pair of images in a way that will replicate the way I want to present them. I’m thinking that I would do either three or four pairs of linked images individually framed but hung together in a series of pairs so that they will sort of look like this one….... Each photograph will be printed at around 20×24 inches and then with the matting and framing I estimate each pair will need about 2 metres of wall space for hanging. Let me know what you all think while I’m open to suggestions with this body of work and I’ll listen to all suggestions….... ta muchly in advance…...
It’s been a while since I put up the companion images to this muted landscape #4 , here , here , and here but the series finally came back from the framers and they all got shipped off to Parliment House in Sydney just yesterday. Oh my goodness getting all these done was a bit of an epic ….. and then there was an overbooking at the venue so we’ve all had to wait an extra week to put up our show…... it was all meant to be on the wall on the 4th but now won’t open till next week….... so all the frantic rushing to get it all done in time was all a bit nuts now that I think about it. Anyway after a lot of flaffing about with how best to articulate the images to best advantage I finally printed them myself on to 325 gsm warm toned Fabrizoni finest watercolour paper with my very nice Epson photostylus R1800 printer. Then each pair …. there are four in total…. has been double mounted in a mid grey matt with a glossy black box frame. Each print is A3 in size and the final dimensions of each framed pair is 106.5cms by 53 cms. So only mediumly large in the end. The mid grey tone of the matt reads as mid green in relation to the prints themself and the whole effect is of a very muted but mysterious melancholic beauty…. I’m very pleased with them. So if your in Sydney next week pop into Macquarie Street and have a look…. there are four of these Broken Landscapes and another new doubled work to boot….... Landscape for Piet Mondrian #1 and #2… I’ll post about that set later on
Well it was a very strange day shooting. Part of a series. This image was shot using a / mamiya 220 camera (6X6 medium format) and iLford black and white 120 roll film. / The original is hand printed by moi on Ilford Multigrade IV Fiber Based Paper.
series. This image was shot using a / mamiya 220 camera (6X6 medium format) and iLford black and white roll film. / The original is hand printed by moi on Ilford Multigrade IV Fiber Based Paper.
Featured in the Bubble Boutique Group Models: / The Very Talented Barssel and the Beautiful TextureoftheSin Inspired by the story ‘Wuthering Heights’ Copyright
Cajoled another photo from my mate, Howard Marsh. Part of the Alaska Range, taken in Denali National Park and Preserve. As Is Featured in Alaska ~ Beyond Your Dreams – Thank you Nikon, film, Minolta Dimage scanner
These gondolas were taken in Venice, Italy. I used a black and white film and scanned to digital to enhance the mood. I sold a small laminated print with a white border to someone in the UK, on redbubble. Many thanks so very much indeed.
Taken at Loch Ard Gorge on the Great Ocean Road, VIC. This was shot with a Mamiya RZ67 on Ilford Pan F 50 ISO film. Only other details I remember was that it was shot with a 50mm lens, equivalent to about 24mm in 35mm format. I hand developed the film myself, scanned it and added the sepia toning with Photoshop. BEST VIEWED LARGER
as I was in Philly.. I remembered the saying .. brotherly love.. to tell you the truth , I didnt really expect it. but , I was very surprised pleasantly , to be given the courtesy by strangers .. of a hello..and of stopping their cars to let me go “jaywalking”.. and the like.. it was great to see this . This photo was taken from inside of the beautiful train station at 12th street.. where there is a huge room, with a window to the skyline I layered this with a velvia film …
i visited egypt in 2007, and went to alexandria. this is the mediterranean. this is what i saw… / jordan busson. 6 december 2007 – 19 september 2009. add elucidate on: /
RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.
On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.
It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.
Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 331,500 items to more than 70 countries around the world.
Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.