OMG, I am from Florida and how you "weathered" the cold to shoot these shots is a credit to your determination. I have a Harmen Titan Pinhole 4x5 with 72mm cone (F206) and love it. It is an exciting adventure in 4x5 photography needing to use reciprocity failure adjustments in almost every exposure. Your dog is beautiful! Thank you for your videos and great information!
What an awesome day, you were definitely very productive! thanks for the inspiration on the pinhole and multiple exposures. Great location, splendid looking Lith btw. Reeves your dog seemed also to enjoy it.
Aha that's where that split tone print is from. Some really nice images! I must try that multiexposure method with our geodesic dome here in Montreal, maybe in a snowstorm!
Yup 👍 you get some really interesting stuff. Trying to dial in the right amount of exposure/shots for darkroom printing. Things get really dense really quick. So far the sweet spot has been 2 stops under for around 10-exposures and 3 stops under for 20 ish…. Mileage may very! Def more testing needed
Thanks Michael, it is a real different experience… kind of reminds me of shooting with a holgabwithout the viewfinder. Takes a bit to get used to the soft images. But works well with lith and on Ilford Art 390 paper.
So many things in this video you have exposed to me. Thanks for the lesson and links for the multiple exposure techniques. I am going to give them a try with my 500C/M too and see what I can do!
You are welcome! I found with my Hasselblad and based on the article by James that if I meter and then underexpose by about 2-3 stops (depending on the # of exposures) it was pretty successful 👍 (this was using HP5)
I’m also a fan of Frank Machalowski. I had an attempt at a multiple exposure recently (only on 35mm). I need to refine the process but it was fun to try. Thanks for linking to James’ Instagram and article. I really like the images you made in this video. A couple of them reminded me of images by Harry Callahan.
Loved this episode! Thanks for braving the freezing temps to get these shots. In a future video would you mind talking about that backpack you were using that day and maybe how you might pack it out depending on what kind of shoot you were going to do? Thanks!
Amazing hassy shots ❤. I also love the pinhole multiple exposures shot. It is possible to archive similar result without doing multiple exposures in camera but simply doing different photos and then merge them in photoshop? Thanks a lot
Thanks! I believe I have seen people do this with multiple layers and moving them slightly and messing with the blending modes. I can not find the photographers page any longer but it was really cool stuff!
OMG, I am from Florida and how you "weathered" the cold to shoot these shots is a credit to your determination. I have a Harmen Titan Pinhole 4x5 with 72mm cone (F206) and love it. It is an exciting adventure in 4x5 photography needing to use reciprocity failure adjustments in almost every exposure. Your dog is beautiful! Thank you for your videos and great information!
You kinda get used to it 😀. The snow is super pretty (for about a week) That Ilford camera does look interesting. Thanks for watching!
You can never go wrong with the Hasselblad!
Indeed. Mine is overdue for some use!
What an awesome day, you were definitely very productive! thanks for the inspiration on the pinhole and multiple exposures. Great location, splendid looking Lith btw. Reeves your dog seemed also to enjoy it.
Thanks Gavin! It was a cold but fun day!
I love the dreamy quality of pinhole photography, enjoyed the video.
Thanks!
Very cool tree shots! Really abstract
Thanks! Super fun technique 👍
Aha that's where that split tone print is from. Some really nice images! I must try that multiexposure method with our geodesic dome here in Montreal, maybe in a snowstorm!
Yup 👍 you get some really interesting stuff. Trying to dial in the right amount of exposure/shots for darkroom printing. Things get really dense really quick. So far the sweet spot has been 2 stops under for around 10-exposures and 3 stops under for 20 ish…. Mileage may very! Def more testing needed
I've never tried using a pinhole camera. I liked the results!
Thanks Michael, it is a real different experience… kind of reminds me of shooting with a holgabwithout the viewfinder. Takes a bit to get used to the soft images. But works well with lith and on Ilford Art 390 paper.
Great video, your sound mix and music choices are really great.
Thank you so much!
love the shot at 8.47 !
Thanks Austen
So many things in this video you have exposed to me. Thanks for the lesson and links for the multiple exposure techniques. I am going to give them a try with my 500C/M too and see what I can do!
You are welcome! I found with my Hasselblad and based on the article by James that if I meter and then underexpose by about 2-3 stops (depending on the # of exposures) it was pretty successful 👍 (this was using HP5)
I’m also a fan of Frank Machalowski. I had an attempt at a multiple exposure recently (only on 35mm). I need to refine the process but it was fun to try. Thanks for linking to James’ Instagram and article.
I really like the images you made in this video. A couple of them reminded me of images by Harry Callahan.
Thank you!
Loved this episode! Thanks for braving the freezing temps to get these shots. In a future video would you mind talking about that backpack you were using that day and maybe how you might pack it out depending on what kind of shoot you were going to do? Thanks!
Thank you! I will see what I can do!
Nice shots!
Thank you!
I know that park :D In the right conditions, it's cool at night too
It has been there as long as I can remember... Cool place! Haven't been there at night in a while but will check it out!
Amazing hassy shots ❤. I also love the pinhole multiple exposures shot. It is possible to archive similar result without doing multiple exposures in camera but simply doing different photos and then merge them in photoshop? Thanks a lot
Thanks! I believe I have seen people do this with multiple layers and moving them slightly and messing with the blending modes.
I can not find the photographers page any longer but it was really cool stuff!
@@Distphoto thanks a lot for the reply :)