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I agree.
Brooklyn Bridge looks gorgeous in redscale. There are also some shots at the Lomography shop in West Village, where I had almost to beg to buy a t-shirt. Disappointing customer service. Random shots at Wall Street and Chinatown as well. Fun times with @kylethefrench. I wish I had more time to scan all the other 12 films I have from this trip.
Exposing both sides of the film (EBS).
I shot on correct(normal) side first in a sunny/bright day, at ISO400(ISO800 film inside). Below half of the lense was masked with a splitzer. After finished a roll, reverse the film (in a dark-room). Then start shooting on redscale side in a cloudy/rainy day, at ISO200. Upper half was masked with a splitzer. The order of each location is precisely the same as 1st shots. I took notes in details about locations and shot all places with iPhone, to remember locations. Need patience, concentration, and accuracy for this challenge. Plus must be careful with 'gaps' between frames. Have a look at my article about this technique: http://www.lomography.com/magazine/tipster/2013/01/14/tipster-how-to-take-symmetrical-images-with-exposing-both-sides-of-the-film-ebs
I shot these through my Blackbird Fly with a mask, the last page of James Elroys book White Jazz, and then ran the roll through my canon with the old microscope lens attached to a body cap.
I shot these through my Blackbird Fly with a mask, the last page of James Elroys book White Jazz, and then ran the roll through my canon with the old microscope lens attached to a body cap.
underexposed, it was a challenge because no lightmeter.
scanner was a problem again.
I was planning a peaceful photo shoot for this guy, he ended up invading my bathroom. legend.