Archive for the ‘GOYA!’ Category

All Verticals…

Monday, November 7th, 2011
I can’t believe I made it through 2 rolls shooting nothing but verticals, 6×7 looks good shot that way, don’t you think?  Develop and scan by NCPS!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hit the Streets of Deep Ellum…

Sunday, November 6th, 2011
With Grant Meeks today for a little photowalk, I keep forgetting what a colorful part of Dallas it is….

 

 

 

 

 

Fuji 400h + Nikon F4 + 24 and 50mm lenses.  Cheap Walgreen’s develop and scan.

Two Fort Worth Images and some Dallas Squares….

Monday, October 24th, 2011

 

 

 

 

 

Black and White images Kodak 400BNC – Bronica Gs-1
Color Fuji 160s – Yashica 124mat.  Develop and Scan NCPS

 

 

 

First Week of October…

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

 

Just got back the negatives and scans from what I shot during the WorldWide Photowalk…missed the deadline because I shot film, oh well.   I had a blast, met some new people, and had some great pizza downtown!
Went all Fuji, 400h for color, Acros 100 for black and white; Develop and Scan by NCPS.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

36 Frames…

Sunday, October 2nd, 2011

This has been a perfect weekend, first weekend of the Texas State Fair and the Worldwide Photowalk!  I joined a group for a tour of Downtown Dallas on Saturday, it was so fun and I got to meet some other local photographers.  Shot 4 rolls of 120, sending them off to NCPS, can’t wait to post my images on the group’s flickr page, and I can’t wait to see what everyone else shot.  Also it was nice to actually get out and walk while I shoot for a change.  It was so fun, and the weather was so nice, I had to do it again today!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

36 Frames of Portra 160, exposed at 100, cheap Develop and Scan by Walgreens.  One Roll.

 

 

No words…

Saturday, October 1st, 2011
Just images

 

 

 

1st rolls from NCPS

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

 

Just got back my first rolls with NCPS, very, very happy with their services and plan to make usage of their film processing services in the near future!  I sent them a mix of old reliable(Fuji 400H), a new fav (New Portra 800), and some expired Kodak 100 Ultra Color that I’ve had lying around for like 6 years or so!  Color from all the scans were spot on!  Didn’t send them any black and white, but I have a photowalk in Downtown Dallas for world photowalk day, and I know I’m going to shoot some b&w then.
I took a walk around the Stockyards with some Fuji 400H:

Stockyards 1

Stockyards 2

Stockyards 3

Stockyards 4

Then a couple days later I shot some Portra 800, looking to use more of this film in the future…kind of wish Kodak would make this film in 220 like they do with the 160 and 400 films

1st Portra 800

1st Portra 800 2

And lastly the expired Ultra Color:

100 Ultra Color 1

100 Ultra Color 2

100 Ultra Color 3

NCPS rocks!

Kodachrome…may you RIP

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

Kodachrome.  That name stirs up many emotions.  Floods the mind with many images.  Countless of them that you’ve probably seen at some time and point in your life.  Time, Life, National Geographic, all had photographers who shot with the iconic (I don’t even think that that word does justice to the emulsion) Kodak slide film.  Paul Simon sang “Please don’t take my Kodachrome away”…but Kodak did, no longer producing the film or the infamously toxic chemical process used to develop it K-14.

A little over 5 years ago, I found myself in a closing Ritz camera store in the Grapevine Mills mall.  They were trying to unload everything that they could, including rolls of expired film of all kinds.  Black and white, Fuji color, Kodak color print, different slide films, 110 (when’s the last time you’ve seen 110 film??).   Digging through the bin, I didn’t see anything that caught my eye….until I saw a couple of boxes of K64, expiration 2003.  I grabbed them (there were actually alot more than the two I picked up…why didn’t I buy more rolls is beyond me), and I was off.  I knew that it was hard to get Kodachrome processed then (I believe that Dwayne’s and one other place still processed K-14 at that time), and I knew that I would have to make the images count, that I had to use them for something special (so I thought), so I brought them home and threw them in the freezer, to be thawed out for that imaginary occasion in the unknown future.

Those rolls sat unused for 5 years.

When the announcement came from Kodak that they were ending the 75 year production run of the film, and support of the K-14 process, I knew that I couldn’t wait forever, that I had to shoot something with the film.  The imaginary special occasion was the experience of using this film, and being one of the last groups of people to have Dwayne’s process it (my film made it there around Dec 10th).  I shot one roll of K64 (the other roll I gave to Grant Meeks for him to have fun shooting some Kodachrome) and a roll of K200 that I found laying around(I have no idea when or where I bought it!).  I decided to shoot the K64 as an exercise in seeing and shooting with limitations; one body (My trusty and war torn Nikon F3), one lens (one of my favorite Nikkors, the 20 2.8 ais – really a limitation in seeing, shooting with only an ultrawide angle lens).

***The First and Last frame***

Film Time! (Images from April…)

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

Just got some images back from ScanCafe….shooting film these days takes some dedication; either you breakdown and get a scanner (and if you’re really serious, learn to hand process your own film, that way you don’t have to send it to a lab and wait almost 2 weeks to get it back…), or you subject yourself to the time it takes to get a couple of rolls developed and then paying the cost to have someone locally scan it (or send it off for scanning).


These are from the first time that me and Grant Meeks, met and we went for a small photowalk through the streets of downtown Dallas, he shot digital, so he had his post up on this within a week or so of us shooting it….me well it’s almost August and I’m just getting the images up, I got the disc from Scancafe back about a week ago.  I still want to shoot more film, I just need to make the investment so that I don’t have to have such a long turnaround time on the images.

2/2 of a GOYA shoot

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Here’s the rest of the recent GOYA shoot with Grant Meeks.

Oh, and for those that are wondering what GOYA means….Get Off Your A** (From Zack Arias)