chris000
Landscaper
Following a couple of recent threads on X-Pan photos I was inspired to start a gallery on my website showing a few of my own - link in my sig. below. here are 3 examples:
Arthur's Stone on The Gower in Wales
The London Eye
By the sea, Sandbanks, Dorset
Arthur's Stone on The Gower in Wales

The London Eye

By the sea, Sandbanks, Dorset

sleepyhead
Well-known
Nice Chris - tthanks for sharing.
I just got an Xpan a couple of weeks ago, nothing to show yet...
I just got an Xpan a couple of weeks ago, nothing to show yet...
chris000
Landscaper
thanks, glad you enjoyed.
israel_alanis
The Laugher
Great shots Chris
sleepyhead
Well-known
Chris, the tonality of your B&W XPAN shots are very nice - could you share abit of technical info on films & developers that you use, filters (if any), scanner used, etc.?
I still have no pictures from my Xpan yet, but plan to scan with my Minolta Dimage 5400.
I still have no pictures from my Xpan yet, but plan to scan with my Minolta Dimage 5400.
chris000
Landscaper
Chris, the tonality of your B&W XPAN shots are very nice - could you share abit of technical info on films & developers that you use, filters (if any), scanner used, etc.?
I still have no pictures from my Xpan yet, but plan to scan with my Minolta Dimage 5400.
I'm happy to share, although I'm not very 'technical' I'm afraid;
FILM - The three showing in this thread, Arthur's Stone is on Tri-X, the other two are FP4. The film is all commercially processed through a local photo shop.
SHOOT - I only rarely use the auto settings, preferring to use a (very) cheap hand held meter. The 45mm lens has a centre filter attached and I normally use a Lee mid yellow filter if I want to boost the sky contrast a little.
SCAN - Epson V700 at maximum resolution, set for black and white negative and scanned as 16bit greyscale. I adjust the histogram to make the scan just very slightly flat in contrast.
PROCESS - Photoshop Elements 6, avoid cropping if possible, adjust levels, a little burning or dodging if necessary and convert to RGB so that I can add a little warmth. Judicious use of Unsharp Mask.
That's it, the rest of course is just pure genius
DabCan10
Established
Great shots, was nice to know about the film used as well! The xpan is truly an amazing camera.
sleepyhead
Well-known
Chris, thanks for the info - it's always interesting to here how people achieve fine results.
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