Scanning color film for the first time in a long time, working hard on printing my work, the Holga is back, and I'm going back to Portland this week.
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Landscape photography with a dog
You might know that I'm the proud owner of the most beautiful dog in the world. And as you might suspect, this post is just an excuse to share photos of her.
I love spending time in the outdoors with my dog, but as a landscape photographer that raises the obvious question: is bringing a dog along good or bad for my photography?
Read MoreShooting film: Chicago, day 2
Second day shooting with the Bronica in Chicago, where I took some more long exposures and struggled a bit to find good compositions.
Read MoreLandscape photography is all about extraordinary conditions
Extraordinary conditions make ordinary places look extraordinarily beautiful. I'd been waiting for a day like this the whole winter.
Read MoreAmerican Road Trip Journal #17: Salton Sea
After a month on the road and a week of heavy eating in San Francisco, we were a bit tired when we got to Southern California. Hot temperatures (for December) didn't help either.
We tried to visit LA but the smog was so thick that we decided to skip it. Palm Springs, a small town farther inland, was a nice place where I recharged batteries before the second half of our trip.
One of those days, I drove to the Salton Sea. It was the most surreal place of the whole trip and an experience that will not be easy to forget.
I found incredible post-apocalyptic, decaying landscapes, but the mud and the putrid, fetid smell I found once I got out of the car weren't things I was hoping to find there.
That night's sunset was one for the books. It was quite spectacular and it helped to make me feel like I was in some other planet, in a decaying, abandoned, fallen planet in a Star Wars universe.
Not the best photos of the trip by any means, but what an evening I had there.
Shooting film: Chicago, day 1
Day 1 of our long weekend in Chicago, Illinois. I walked around the city and shot some film, trying to take some images I had in mind.
I love winter
A video collection of some images I took these last days around here in Michiana, the Indiana Dunes and the Salamonie River.
Shooting Film: Indiana Dunes
The Indiana Dunes is one of the very few places I have here (within driving distance for a one-day trip) where I can take somewhat outdoors photos.
I'd never been to the place before, so I'm not sure what's going to look like when the snow melts. I've seen photos and to be honest, it's a bit "blah".
But now, in winter, it's a landscape I'd never seen before. This video is the first of my already multiple trips up there, and probably not the last one to come (last time I was there, the lake was frozen as far as I could see - truly an amazing view).
American Road Trip Journal #16: San Francisco
This was my 6th or 7th visit to the city of San Francisco, and after trying and failing all of those times, I was determined to get the shot I always wanted: the San Francisco fog, at the Golden Gate, at sunrise. It took me a few days and a few toll payments, but I finally got it.
Some more things in the video, along with some random comments about some of the photos.
Developing HP5+ at 1600 using D-76 and TF-4
Short video about developing Ilford HP5, shot at 1600 ASA, using Kodak D-76 and Photographer's Formulary TF-4 as the developer and fixer respectively.
Recipe is as follows:
film stock: Ilford HP5+, 120 film
temperature: 70F - 21C
developer: Kodak D-76, 1+1
...notes: 18 minutes, agitation / inversion of 10 seconds
stop bath: water
...notes: 3 rinses, 1 minute agitation
fixer: Photographer's Formulary TF-4
...notes: 6 minutes, agitation / inversion of 30 seconds
wet agent: Kodak Photo-Flo
Shooting film in Chain O Lakes, Indiana
There aren't many places where you can go out and enjoy nature here in Northern Indiana, and they require some driving to get to. But they are going to be my playground for a couple more months, so I'm spending some time getting to know them.
The first one, Chain O Lakes, is 40 minutes away from where we live. It's far from being "wilderness", but it does offer some nature that you can enjoy mostly by yourself at this time of the year, as long as you avoid the smaller lakes, crowded with people ice fishing.
As usual, I shot Ilford HP5+ with my Bronica SQ-Ai, although I also loaded Fuji Acros 100 for the first time. I only got to get one shot with this new film (for me) over there, and it's at the very end of the video.
Indiana Diary II
Long exposure #FAIL, Chicago, January 2018
Last week, I got to spend a few days in Chicago. And of course, I brought my film camera gear with me. The hotel we stayed at had a very sweet view, so before going to bed to take a well deserved nap I set up my camera and left it taking a 40-minute long exposure. But it was a fail.
Long exposures at sunrise or sunset times are very tricky.
Read More7 Bronica SQ-Ai Shooting Tips
I've been shooting quite a lot with my Bronica since I got it last year. I brought it with me to the mountains, to the desert and to the shores of oceans and lakes all across the country (see my [American Road Trip series on YouTube).
I sat down and I thought about some tips I would've loved to know about when I started shooting it. Hoping they help someone, here they go in no particular order.
Read MoreAmerican Road Trip Journal #15: Salt Point State Park
New episode of the American Road Trip, number 15!
This time we car camp in Salt Point State Park. This spot is some 2 hours south of Mendocino and 2.5 hours north of the Bay Area.
We went back to Point Arena from there: the weather was much nicer than last time and also Rachel didn't get to visit it last time. Walking on the headlands of this place was one of the most relaxing things we did during the whole road trip.
Salt Point is not very big, but it's still beautiful and perfect to catch a sunset, which is what we did.
We also visited the coast of Sonoma County so I checked a few extra places I'd never been to.
Next episode, San Francisco! My favorite city in the United States.
Shooting film in Notre Dame, South Bend
If you follow college football, you know Notre Dame. Their team is very popular nationwide, or at least that's what I've been told (I'm not a huge football fan, although I do watch games from time to time and I have my favorites - the Seahawks and the Ducks, of course!).
Even though we are now very close to South Bend, I'd never been to the actual campus. So taking advantage of a trip I had to make there, and given that the hotel where I was staying was literally next door to the university, I finally paid a visit to the place.
I only had one hour at the one parking lot I could find that didn't require a permit, and it was very, very cold (as usual). So the photos are nothing amazing - they could've been much better if I got there just 5-10 minutes earlier though, while the snowstorm was still strong.
I'll have to go back and spend some more time there.
How I found time for landscape photography while having a day job
Time is precious. Being a landscape photographer requires a lot of exclusive time but most people don't seem to have it. These are some things I used to do that helped me find that time.
Read MoreAmerica Road Trip Journal #14: Mendocino County
Mendocino was the first "new" place to us on this road trip. It was an entirely new landscape for me to explore, and I finally had the time to do so.
Based in Fort Bragg, I spent some 2 and half to 3 full days driving and hiking around the cute small towns and beautiful coastal line that this part of California has to offer.
You can't really go wrong here: not only you have the southern part of the Lost Coast very close, but also places like Glass Beach or Mendocino Headlands.
And further south, my favorite of them all: Point Arena. I took some long exposures there that are some of my favorite photos of this road trip so far.
Orange Filter example: Monument Valley, Arizona
I've had color filters for quite a while now, but only recently I started using them to my advantage. In fact, the orange filter lives -almost- permanently on my lens now.
Read MoreShooting film in New Buffalo, Michigan
Last week, I headed just over the Michigan border to photograph a beach I visited 4 years ago in New Buffalo. But it's been so cold that the place doesn't look like a beach at all. It's a frozen world.
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