Hi Bruce ... what I wanted in this shot was the high contrast and back
lighting to see what kind of latitude the film had, which seems to be
pretty good.  I shot this @ +/- one stop from what I figured to be the
ideal exposure.

I've developed a bit of fascination with the gun shop.  Right now there's
some construction going on around it, so getting some good pics can be a
bit of a problem.  Lighting's also an issue.  Because of the way the shop's
situated (facing N NE), it's mostly in shadow all day.

Thanks for commenting.  Off to breakfast now.

Shel 


> [Original Message]
> From: Bruce Dayton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Shel Belinkoff <[email protected]>
> Date: 5/15/2005 8:11:01 AM
> Subject: Re: PAW PESO - Section of Old Wagon Wheel Fence
>
> Shel,
>
> Certainly a high contrast scene.  For me, the shot looks more like a
> snap (of course, you were testing), but there looks to be lots of
> potential here - angle, composition and lighting could combine for a
> very nice image.  Seems like one to visit multiple times.
>
> -- 
> Best regards,
> Bruce
>
>
> Sunday, May 15, 2005, 7:48:07 AM, you wrote:
>
> SB> There's a gun shop located in a nearby town that has a fence made of
stone
> SB> and old wagon wheels surrounding it.  Last week, while testing some
film,
> SB> the light seemed about right to photograph a section of the fence. 
Here's
> SB> a frame from that test.
>
> SB> http://home.earthlink.net/~scbelinkoff/wagwheel.html  (250K file)
>
> SB> Tech stuff:  Pentax LX on original Tiltall tripod, SMC Pentax
30mm/F2.8 @
> SB> 5.6, Agfa RSX II 50, Adjusted color balance in PS CS to get as close
to the
> SB> slide as possible.
>
> SB> My monitor's a little out of calibration, so comments about shadow
detail
> SB> and sharpness are certainly welcome, as are any other comments.
>
>
> SB> Shel 
>
>
>


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