Usefilm Home Sign Up Now! | Log In | Help  

Film and Digital Photography


Saturday under the trees
Image Title:  Saturday under the trees
 
 By: Nick Karagiaouroglou  
  Copyright ©2009



 Browse Images
  Recent Pictures
  Todays Pictures
  Yesterdays Pictures
  1 Year Ago Today
  Summary Mode
  All Usefilm Pictures
 
 Image Options
  Staff Choice
  Editors Choice
  Featured Donors
  Featured Photographers
  Featured Photos
  Community Favorites
  Unrated Images
  Featured Critiques
  Critique Only Images
  Critiquer's Corner
  Images With No Critiques
  Random Images
  Panoramic Images
  Images By Country
  Images By Camera
  Images By Lens
  Images By Film/Media
   
 Categories
   
 Projects
   
 Find Member
Name
User ID
 
   

 

Photographer Nick Karagiaouroglou {K:126841}
Project N/A Camera Model Hasselblad 500C
Categories Street
People
Film Format 60x60mm
Portfolio Lens Carl Zeiss Planar 1/2.8 80mm Synchro Compur
Uploaded 11/2/2009 Film / Memory Type Fuji Velvia RVP 100
    ISO / Film Speed 100
Views 49 Shutter 1/125
Favorites Aperture f/22
Critiques 11 Rating
Pending
/ 0 Ratings
Location City -  Lucerne
State - 
Country - Switzerland   Switzerland
About A typical summer saturday in Lucerne. If you look a bit close you will see that there are strange lines over the shadows (especially near the bottom right). What can that be? I am a quite clueless here... Anyway, I hope that the string sunlight and the atmosphere were captured well. Any comments would be very welcome.
Random Pictures By:
Nick
Karagiaouroglou


Unexplained thoughts resemble visitors...

Almost an island

The houses at the dam

Natural sculpture

Prepared

Go through snow

Some more consequences of the politician's weird checkerboard

The drums set

Digitizable theories and the continuum

They said yes and now we are all happy

There are 11 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Andre Denis   {K:61663} 11/2/2009
Hi Nick,
I'm going to assume that the four posted today are from the same roll of film, and developed at the same time. I could be wrong, but it seems they have similar developing parameters.
I think the lines are probably on the negatives due to a problem with the film processing. Check the negatives under some kind of magnification.
Andre


Wayne Harridge   {K:13945} 11/3/2009
Definitely take a look at the velvia with a magnifier, but I have the feeling the lines might be a scanning articat of some kind. Strange that they are at an angle and not parallel to the frame edges.

...Wayne


Nanda Baba das   {K:14164} 11/3/2009
I agree with Andre. People in the picture have strong red color.
Best wishes
Nanda


Dave Stacey   {K:138303} 11/4/2009
A nicely composed architectural, as well as street shot, Nick!
Dave.


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:126841} 11/5/2009
Hi Andre!

You are absolutely right. It was the same roll of film and all the images were developed by the same external partner of my photo store.

I am examining the films and my scanning process. It seems that the marks are really on the developed film frames... Strange but I try to get some reasonable understanding of that.

Nick


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:126841} 11/6/2009
Thanks a lot for the input, Wayne. I also tip to my scanning process but still I didn't find anything certain. It has to be examined in all detail, I guess...

Cheers!

Nick


Andre Denis   {K:61663} 11/6/2009
Hi Nick,
I would almost bet that the marks are the result of residue left behind by the drying process. There is probably something like a hi-teck wind shield wiper "squeegee" that is brushed over the film in an effort to stop water marks from forming. It might not be working at 100% efficiency.
I remember having similar problems with calcium like deposits when developing my own B&W film.
Andre


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:126841} 11/7/2009
Many thanks again, Dave!

If I only knew about those lines...

Nick


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:126841} 11/7/2009
Hi Andre!

And when I think of it... you must be bingo here! This can really be the reason for that!

So now I have at last some clue about what I could ask my trustworthy Mr Byland from the local photo stoe. I showed him the images and he already informed his partners who developed this fild. (As I already said that was not a film that he could develop with his equipment in the shop.) They said that they can't imagine any problem in their processing lines, but now we can perhaps give them a clue in order to be aware of potential problems.

Andre, I thank you so much for the help!

Nick


Andre Denis   {K:61663} 11/12/2009
It will be interesting to see what it turns out to be, As Dana Scully from the X-Files used to say.."There must be a reasonable explanation for this phenomenum" :)
Andre


Nick Karagiaouroglou   {K:126841} 11/14/2009
Exactly Scully! ;-)

And the guys from the photo labor discovered that their process for this film type had to be re-callibrated in order to get the micro-fiber dryer rotating in the right angle/direction in reference to the film frames. They told me that it is way not the same if it rotates at the one or the other angle. I couldn't even imagine that but I will try another one and see what happens then.

It seems you were indeed on the right path!

Mulder. ;-)


  1

 

|  FAQ  |  Terms of Service  |  Donate  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise  |

Copyright ©2005 Photo Publishing Group, LLC - All Rights Reserved

Elapsed Time:: 1.078125