A little experiment.
An update on my adventures last Sunday morning with my Zero Image 6×9 pinhole camera.
I developed the Fujifilm Neopan Acros 100 that was in the camera back on Thursday, along with the *fat roll I posted about last Tuesday… more on the mystery roll soon.
Everything went smoothly with the developing. Stock D76 @ 68º for 7 minutes 15 seconds.
The negatives hung in the hall bathroom until the next day, and they were dry by the time I was ready to scan.
The Epson V500 I have has been a work horse over the years, handling everything I throw at it. But things went south from the beginning on this particular task.
Things went south from the beginning on this particular task…
There’s a white background that snaps in-and-out of the scanner lid, it’s not needed when scanning film. Took it out. Then I pulled out the 120 negative scan tray and loaded up a strip of three shots, set up the scan software per usual, and went through the process of creating a preview before actually scanning.
That’s when things started to go awry. The preview was splitting up the negatives in a way that was totally unusable.
I fiddled with every the setting I could, but the results did not change.
I remembered watching a You Tube video some time ago that showed how to scan a negative as if it were paper. I figured I’d play a bit and put the white background back in the bottom of the lid and removed the negative from the scan tray, placing it emulsion side down so the film curled away from the glass, then ran the software as normal for scanning documents.
Well, that worked. Kind of…
Intrigued, but not totally satisfied that I couldn’t get the scanner to work properly, I set about fiddling some more. I noticed a button near the bottom of the interface that was labeled “reset” and thought, what the hell, then clicked it.
And this time the machine worked as designed. Happiness.
After a few dialog boxes, everything seemed like normal, so I set the scanner up again for negatives.
And this time the machine worked as designed. Happiness.
Here’s the result…
I like them both. You can see more detail in the shadows of the first scan, and I like the somewhat distressed appearance. The second, proper scan is very clear (for a pinhole shot) and not as washed out.
It’s a 3 second exposure, taken at the La Frontera shopping mall, from a car wash located in the southeast corner of the property. I asked permission to park and played in an adjacent field, with my tripod and camera set-up in the shadows cast by the fly-over.
Love the lines, curves, and shadows. The sun was still pretty low in the sky and being blocked by the column on the left side of the image.
* a fat roll is when 120 film does not roll tightly around the take-up spool, usually resulting in light leaking to expose the edges of the last few coils at the end of the roll.
[…] It’s 35/45, the picture I made with the Zero Image 6×9 and an expired roll of Fuji Acros 100. The story of this pinhole adventure/experiment is well documented in an earlier post. […]
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