Daily Distraction

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Decided to play :). I've done a lot of photography so why not!

This one is the 2016 Super Moon rising through clouds. I used a Nikon D750 with a 300mm Nikon lens, set to take three images is quick succession at three different exposures, then blended:

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Not enough pixels - Fixed it! For a while anyways.

Back when I was doing a lot of photography and people were buying my images I ran into a problem. A lot of folks wanted very large prints and I had to turn them down. From my perspective digital cameras, even today, are not up to the 40x60 and larger print task. Its a pixel problem, just not enough native pixels.

So... I decided to use a film camera again, but not just any film camera - image below. It's a 4x5 traditional but modern view camera, and that changed everything! A real challenge to use but it made incredibly detailed images. A 4x5 piece of film, when drum scanned to digital easily has 512 megapixels. That was a a game changer with 20 times the definition of my then 24 megapixel digital.

And because they are made to shoot at very small apertures, and can tilt the lenses, depth of field is unlimited!

I will do another post after this one with the first image I took with that view camera. Sadly film is dead. There are no drum scanner people around anymore :(.

This image below was made with a Nikon D750 and a couple of studio flashes

_DSC4692_DxO-2160-X3.jpg
 
Not enough pixels - Fixed it! For a while anyways.

Back when I was doing a lot of photography and people were buying my images I ran into a problem. A lot of folks wanted very large prints and I had to turn them down. From my perspective digital cameras, even today, are not up to the 40x60 and larger print task. Its a pixel problem, just not enough native pixels.

So... I decided to use a film camera again, but not just any film camera - image below. It's a 4x5 traditional but modern view camera, and that changed everything! A real challenge to use but it made incredibly detailed images. A 4x5 piece of film, when drum scanned to digital easily has 512 megapixels. That was a a game changer with 20 times the definition of my then 24 megapixel digital.

And because they are made to shoot at very small apertures, and can tilt the lenses, depth of field is unlimited!

I will do another post after this one with the first image I took with that view camera. Sadly film is dead. There are no drum scanner people around anymore :(.

This image below was made with a Nikon D750 and a couple of studio flashes

_DSC4692_DxO-2160-X3.jpg
You sure?
https://www.indiefilmlab.com/
Learned about them through smarter every day.
Playlist created by him. Needs to be watched in reverse order.


Haven't used it but I do have a mamiya c220 that I got from my grandpa.
 
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This is the first image I made with the view camera in my post above. The subject is the mouth of Tampa Bay just as a front had passed (from right to left in this image). The detail blew me away. Everything in the foreground is there. And so are trees and a lighthouse in perfect focus on the island, called Egmont Key, at the horizon. Impossible to see on this post because of sizing but Cristal clear on a 40x60 print.

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And here is that 40x60 print of the first image. The frame alone was $800 and that was in 2009 dollars! I order all my framing jobs with optical plexiglass. A lot safer and lighter than glass, but wicked expensive.

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You sure?
https://www.indiefilmlab.com/
Learned about them through smarter every day.
Playlist created by him. Needs to be watched in reverse order.


Haven't used it but I do have a mamiya c220 that I got from my grandpa.

Thanks! I haven't shot film in a while, or that many images period. The problem was the Heidelberg drum film scanner, which is the scanner jewel, and I believe there are only 2 places left in the country that not only have them but know how to get the most out of them...