p.giannakis
Pan Giannakis
gelatin silver print (elmar 50mm f3.5) leica III
Erik.
Everything is great about this photo. The composition, the tones - you were in the right place at the right time. Well done
gelatin silver print (elmar 50mm f3.5) leica III
Erik.
Everything is great about this photo. The composition, the tones - you were in the right place at the right time. Well done!
gelatin silver print (elmar 50mm f3.5) leica III
Erik.
Ross by Jim Fischer, on Flickr
Jenny by Jim Fischer, on Flickr
Jordan by Jim Fischer, on Flickr
Cool Tree by Jim Fischer, on Flickr
2E4CBCC6-22E0-4700-9815-3A99A29F2502 by james purves, on Flickr
0B864328-3F8D-4A59-B812-5E7879088A3B by james purves, on Flickr
1C4A033D-8EC3-42A9-9DFF-2A45BFE9B668 by james purves, on Flickr![]()
Leica M6 - TX400 - HC110 - Summicron 35mm ASPH
571E00E4-5064-439C-A67A-4A4690E9D40E by james purves, on Flickr
5FE5C53A-CD26-4BC6-845C-BC16F87542B5 by james purves, on Flickr
911CC68D-D304-4044-8575-7AA39CD3AD66 by james purves, on Flickrm6
zeiss c-soonar 50 1.5
hp5+
OK,I will bore you with another one from the same session. I used just one main WhiteLightning moonlight in a box and a five foot reflector for all of these still life shots. First time I have attempted this before, I felt quite pleased with the final results. And it was a fun day playing around.
The small desktop calendar dated 1942 last date 30th October, was found when my parents died. It was amongst a lot of other stuff from my Fathers Father. I shipped a load of stuff back here from England then, not knowing of what significance this calendar had. It turned out to be the day my Grandfather died and it must have been on his desk. I found a treasure trove of things relating to this great man, including letters from the government to him regarding chemistry suggestions he made during World War One, regarding extracting tar from coal to produce rubber for the war effort, oil shipments were being sunk by the Germans creating serious shortages at the time.
Anyhow I thought someone might have asked the question, so there it is.
571E00E4-5064-439C-A67A-4A4690E9D40E by james purves, on Flickr