Rob MacKillop
Edinburgh Correspondent
From Easter Sunday at the Botanic Gardens and out by the Forth Bridge. It was a sunny day, as you can see, and all felt right with the world.
Bronica SQA1, Portra 400, and either the 40mm wide angle or 200mm. Developed and printed 8x8 by Ag Photolab in Birmingham. I must say the prints look much better, especially the brown tree shot - wow, it looks wonderful. I scanned them, then removed some dust.
In no particular order:
1. Forth Bridge, looking towards the Kingdom of Fife:
2. Peek-a-View:
3. Tug boat out yonder:
4. The brown tree:
5. White things growing out of black things. Note the lichen on the branches. Susan (my wife) did a weekend course on lichen identification, and was informed that in the 1970s there was no lichen to be found in Edinburgh, such was the deleterious effect of the air pollution. Things are much better now, and lichen is a good indicator of the health of a city.
It interests me that when shooting digital I go for "arty" shots, but don't feel the need to do so with film.
EDIT: PS I forgot to mention I use a phone app light meter, called (imaginatively!) Light Meter. It's really very good.
Bronica SQA1, Portra 400, and either the 40mm wide angle or 200mm. Developed and printed 8x8 by Ag Photolab in Birmingham. I must say the prints look much better, especially the brown tree shot - wow, it looks wonderful. I scanned them, then removed some dust.
In no particular order:
1. Forth Bridge, looking towards the Kingdom of Fife:
2. Peek-a-View:
3. Tug boat out yonder:
4. The brown tree:
5. White things growing out of black things. Note the lichen on the branches. Susan (my wife) did a weekend course on lichen identification, and was informed that in the 1970s there was no lichen to be found in Edinburgh, such was the deleterious effect of the air pollution. Things are much better now, and lichen is a good indicator of the health of a city.
It interests me that when shooting digital I go for "arty" shots, but don't feel the need to do so with film.
EDIT: PS I forgot to mention I use a phone app light meter, called (imaginatively!) Light Meter. It's really very good.