Rolleicord Vb, Pan F+ in Beutler.
Your images of stairs?
Stairs
Re: Stairs
A fine photo, Julio-- good detail and tone everywhere!
I accept your invitation and add a photo of the East steps at St. Agatha's Conservatory in downtown St. Paul. It has just been sold and will no longer be a conservatory. The photo was made with a Nikon FM and 50mm f/2 lens on (original) APX 100; I believe the film was developed in D-76 1:1; the snow is from a previous winter .
Bill Delehanty
I accept your invitation and add a photo of the East steps at St. Agatha's Conservatory in downtown St. Paul. It has just been sold and will no longer be a conservatory. The photo was made with a Nikon FM and 50mm f/2 lens on (original) APX 100; I believe the film was developed in D-76 1:1; the snow is from a previous winter .
Bill Delehanty
Re: Stairs
Good photos both of you. Julio, yours has a very Edward Weston look to it.
I'll join this with my offering. Paris, 1980
Shot with a Nikon FE and the Vivitar Series 1 35-85mm.
The original was taken with Kodachrome 64, but the magic of computer technology has allowed me to convert it to a black and white photo.
I'll join this with my offering. Paris, 1980
Shot with a Nikon FE and the Vivitar Series 1 35-85mm.
The original was taken with Kodachrome 64, but the magic of computer technology has allowed me to convert it to a black and white photo.
-Mike Elek
Re: Stairs
Like yours, Julio. Here's one taken near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, in 2008.
James McKearney
Re: Stairs
Thanks for the comments, fine pictures all. Bill''s made me think of the music students going up on those curved stairs.
James, I did not remember so many steps up to the Washington Memorial but that picture is a fine document. Must be a really wide lens.
Mike, I like the light on those stairs and the haze below.
James, I did not remember so many steps up to the Washington Memorial but that picture is a fine document. Must be a really wide lens.
Mike, I like the light on those stairs and the haze below.
Re: Stairs
These are not steps to the memorial itself, but only to a platform from which many other steps lead to it. That was with a very wide Sigma lens, which I no longer have. This shot was at 10mm on a digital Pentax with a 1.5x "crop factor," meaning that it was equivalent to 15mm in 35mm terms.Julio1fer wrote:James, I did not remember so many steps up to the Washington Memorial but that picture is a fine document. Must be a really wide lens.
James McKearney
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