Sunday, February 21, 2010

A hike in the woods

A few days after Christmas, Sarah, the kids, and I went with our friend Mike VanHoeke and his family to visit some American missionaries.  Tim and Donna Barger have been here for (I believe) 19 years and live with their daughter, Kokoroel, in the hills northwest of Yokota.  Mike arrived earlier in the morning to help the Barger's remove a nest of hibernating hornets.  We missed this, but got there in time to sit down to a delicious lunch of Minestrone soup, a Greek salad that we brought, and some of Kumiko Van Hoeke's apple pie.  Afterward, we all put on our hiking shoes and ventured up to a couple of falls at the top of the hill overlooking the Barger's home.  The walk to the first falls was steep but not too difficult.  Mike stepped on what he thought was solid ground, only to have his leg fall through a hole up to his knee, but he was fine.  After the first falls were reached, Tim and I walked up a much more treacherous path to the second falls.  The following photos are from the walk up to the trail and from the second falls.

 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Caffenol

I tried my hand at homebrew developers last night with some Caffenol and Tri-X. I got the recipe from digitaltruth.com but it is floating around all over the net. It's pretty easy to make, but very smelly, much worse than other photo chemicals. It also took a very long time to develop, 35 minutes in the tank instead of the usual 6-8 it takes with other developers. All-in-all it took about 1 hour from setup to tear-down. The coffee stained the film brown, but when scanned in monochrome (or printed in a darkroom) the stain doesn't matter. In fact I've read the stain acts as a contrast filter on the enlarger.  Anyway, enough about that, here are two of the pics, scanned as a color positive to show the stain and as a b&w negative to show the actual photo.  These were taken on a 1960s vintage Voigtlander Bessa I folder.

 
The zone focus attributes to the fuzzyness of  Keddy's head.  This camera is great for sunny days, though.