I am honestly mostly posting this image for the sake of archiving it. This self portrait was made using a very cheap Polaroid 600 OneStep Camera and some very early sepia toned integral instant film made by the Impossible Project. This is stock from back when the films coming from the Impossible Project (now under the brand name of Polaroid once again) weren't exactly stable or anything close to archival so the image is fading fast and probably won't even be visible within the next year or so.
Read MoreBlack and White Film
Riverbank At Sunrise
I really wasn't sure if this image was going to turn out very well. Even though the model and I arrived at our location by about seven o'clock in the morning, the sun was bright and already fairly high in the sky. I wanted to get some images that were more a less an abstract photograph driven by shapes and I'm fairly surprised I managed to get a lot of detail in the water.
Read MoreBasking In The Light
I'm drawing a little bit of a blank today on what to say but I just pulled this image out of the developing tank and loved it so much I wanted to share it right away. There is a bit of crackling on the edges of this negative in part because the film itself was about ten years expired and more than likely not stored in the best of circumstances. I sort of think the added texture and imperfections in the emulsion add a little bit to the image so I really don't mind it being there.
Read MoreTrees With Kodak T-Max 400
I really love old trees. I like dead trees and trees full of bright green leaves. I like tiny trees and grand trees that tower over my head up toward the sky. I like looking at trees and reading under them. Most of all I like photographing trees. I find trees more difficult to photograph than people. I can't tell a tree to shift its trunk toward the light or ask it to move a branch just a little bit down to make a more pleasing composition. All I can do is simply photograph them as they are. That is a lot more difficult than it may sound at first.
This photograph was made along a hiking trial in Mosier Oregon. Mosier is a very sleepy little town with not a lot going for it beyond picture perfect landscapes, a waterfall or two, and a lazy river that winds its way right through the center of town. I say all of that with the utmost respect. I wouldn't want to see Mosier change one little bit. The world needs more towns like Mosier. Nobody seems to be in much of a hurry to get anywhere. Heck, most times when I visit Mosier I don't see much of anyone at all.
Read MoreWindy Photos on Film
I am honestly not entirely sure what I was thinking when I made this photograph. The wind was being rather fierce at the time making the whole scene difficult for both the model and for myself. Freya, the woman posing for this image, was being a serious trooper about it, however, she kept having to hold all of her hair from blowing every which way while simultaneously trying to look like she wasn't being swept off the side of a cliff. Meanwhile, I was grappling with the problem of my eyes tearing up when I tried to look down through the waist level finder of my Mamiya TLR. To an outside observer we both probably looked like a couple of idiots who would have been better served just staying home.
Yet we were both very determined to make it work and stayed in good spirits despite good old mother nature making it incredibly obvious she did not want to play nice with us.
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