Showing posts tagged Ilford

Summertime in Chicago.

Shot with my Diana (1960’s original), using Ilford Delta 400 Pro.

Water tower.

Shot with my Diana (1960’s original), using Ilford Delta 400 Pro.

DEAD. END.

Shot with my Diana (1960’s original), using Ilford Delta 400 Pro.

You can hear the highway breathing…

Shot with my Diana (1960’s original), using Ilford Delta 400 Pro.

With eyes like a child, are we safe?

Shot with my Diana (1960’s original), using Ilford Delta 400 Pro.

Life will return in this electric storm…

Shot with my Diana (1960’s original), using Ilford Delta 400 Pro.

James-the-analoger

Shot with my original Diana using Ilford Delta 400 Pro B&W.

But it seemed to me the saddest thing I’d ever seen…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

I spent a lot of my time looking at blue, the colour of my room and my mood…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

Hyperboloids of wondrous Turingian light…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

Even as you “double”, I am still absolutely immune…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

What does it matter if there’s no one here to share the flowers in the garden…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

Do you fear the dark? Then hush, and soothe your mind…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

No soul of our own to cry for…

Shot with my Minolta Maxxum ST si, using Ilford HP5 Plus 400, and home processed using the Caffenol C technique. Toned in Aperture.

Just went out and walked around and shot up a roll of B&W Ilford HP5 Plus 400. Now to home-process it using the Caffenol C technique. UPDATE : They look great!