Michael Markey
Veteran
Nevertheless I shot and printed this portfolio book between ages 78 and 80 – http://www.thompsonkirk.com/shadowscapes.html – and am working on two others.
Kirk
Lovely work Kirk .....
Nevertheless I shot and printed this portfolio book between ages 78 and 80 – http://www.thompsonkirk.com/shadowscapes.html – and am working on two others.
Kirk
......... Nevertheless I shot and printed this portfolio book between ages 78 and 80 – http://www.thompsonkirk.com/shadowscapes.html – and am working on two others..........
Kirk
Like someone else said, I also need to reconvert some fat back into meat again. The thought of not being able to carry any of my Hasselblad collection around with me while on vacation, frightens me.
...
Forgetting stuff, people's names usually, has really caught me off guard.
(BTW, I was at Forest Park HS, Class of '69)
Hello, Drew-
Chemo fatigue is a really limiting condition, and you can't expect it to go away as soon as infusions end - this potent chemistry will be at work for weeks or months longer. Don't be discouraged when fatigue decreases /energy returns only gradually.
Though it's not a 4x5, the lightest gear affording high image quality that i could find was an A7r2, which I used with the Leica MATE and MATE. This allowed a nice range of focal lengths from 16 to 50 mm for intimate landscapes. (These are retrofocus lenses, so no problems pairing Leica with Sony.) And light carbon Gitzo. Very portable, just right for post-rad or post-chemo.
Image detail can approach 4x5, the problem being that you won't have the same 'toe' and 'shoulder' in your tonal curve. My goal hasn't been to mimic 4x5, but simply to squeeze max IQ out of 'light-weight digital.'
Good luck with prompt recovery!
Kirk