?
greetings
Markus
-Original Message-
From: Aaron Reynolds [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 24, 2006 12:15 AM
To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
Subject: Re: Which high speed film for indoor shots ? was:RE: How do you
select your camera for the day? was
More samples, not as gigantic
On Mar 26, 2006, at 11:05 PM, Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Aaron
thanks a lot for these impressive examples and the other postings, it
does
help me a lot.
But showing me some 6x7 format shots was a bit cruel, how should I
ever like
my grainy 35mm sauces again?
See, I'm enabling you. You must
anniversary character a bit better.
greetings
Markus
-Original Message-
From: Gautam Sarup [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 23, 2006 4:53 AM
To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
Subject: Re: Which high speed film for indoor shots ? was:RE: How do you
select your camera for the day? was
Hi
they would prefer b/w too
;-)
greetings
Markus
-Original Message-
From: Aaron Reynolds [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 23, 2006 1:10 AM
To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
Subject: Re: Which high speed film for indoor shots ? was:RE: How do you
select your camera for the day
On 3/23/06, Markus Maurer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Gautam
thanks a lot for your samples.
The second one looks horrible here, maybe removing the color cast did that,
You're right, my attempt at Photoshop resulted in strange blotches.
As can be seen my skills are rudimentary. I'll try to
More samples, not as gigantic as the last one. Click on each to see a
1280 pixel version.
http://aaronreynolds.ca/gallery/Baseball/helmets1 -- Delta 3200, 6x7,
a more evenly-lit scene (baseball stadium lighting, with the lights
only half on during batting practice)
Here's some unpushed TMax 3200 in available light:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/mawz/tags/3200tmz/
-Adam
Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Herb
Welcome from my side first ;-)
Could you post samples of unpushed ISO 3200 indoor shots with the Ilford
3200 film or other brands from ISO 800-3200 in
On 22 Mar 2006 at 22:36, Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Herb
Welcome from my side first ;-)
Could you post samples of unpushed ISO 3200 indoor shots with the Ilford
3200 film or other brands from ISO 800-3200 in available light?
Unpushed, because I would have to send it to a very standard lab for
Rob Studdert wrote:
On 22 Mar 2006 at 22:36, Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Herb
Welcome from my side first ;-)
Could you post samples of unpushed ISO 3200 indoor shots with the Ilford
3200 film or other brands from ISO 800-3200 in available light?
Unpushed, because I would have to send it to a very
or Konica 800
Centurion
and convert them on the PC to b/w as the safest solution?
greetings
Markus
-Original Message-
From: Rob Studdert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 11:50 PM
To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
Subject: Re: Which high speed film for indoor shots ? was:RE
? was:RE: How do you select
your camera for the day? was
Date: Wed Mar 22, 2006 4:49 pm
Size: 1K
To: pentax-discuss@pdml.net
On 22 Mar 2006 at 22:36, Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Herb
Welcome from my side first ;-)
Could you post samples of unpushed ISO 3200 indoor shots with the Ilford
3200
http://aaronreynolds.ca/gallery/MLU-demo
Not at home to put up a gallery yet, but I remembered that file was still on my
site.
This image was put up to demo hand-holding a Pentax 67, 1/30 f4 with mirror
lock up, shot under a streetlight. The film is Ilford Delta 3200 processed in
Ilfotec
On Mar 22, 2006, at 6:39 PM, Aaron Reynolds wrote:
http://aaronreynolds.ca/gallery/MLU-demo
It's a good dual-purpose example -- if you size it to 55x70mm and crop
out a 24x36mm chunk, you can see both the grain at 35mm and the
difference in grain at 6x7.
I had a moment and did it for you
Hi Markus,
This is Ilford Delta 3200 shot at 3200 and developed in Rodinal
(at home - perhaps a lab would do better.)
http://static.flickr.com/39/84732059_1ef2d6103d_b.jpg
And this is Superia 1600. (Not much Photoshopping except
I tried to correct the colour cast.)
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