Taken with Yashica D TLR, hand processed and scanned. Sooc.
My camera did not wind on properly so this was cropped in camera. There should be much more table in the foreground.
Thank you all for the time,favs, comments and follow--much appreciated and I'm so grateful.
Oooooo you've gotta watch those blimin Yashicas.... The light from the two windows is very effective. And the focus on girls hand works quite well. How do you find the Canoscan for scanning? Whist wasting my life on the web I had a look at film scanners. Oh my hat they can be expensive, I thought something in photography might actually be cheap-I was wrong..
@longexposure I hunted for a while and originally bought a Epson v800 but sent it back as it was twice the price of the canon and to be honest this is a hobby. I got the yashica, Bronica and scanner for the price of the Epson.
The canon is great. It is easy to use and scans well, but then I am not a pixel counter. There are some real anoraks out there when it comes to scanning.
@spanner Your film images seem to be a lot "cleaner" that mine. Obviously I'm at the very very early stages of the film journey. Not sure if I'm getting a lot of dust from drying the film or my scanner is dirty or it's just crap. It is a printer/scanner so it's not the best. I also find the overexposed areas show up a lot more dust.
@longexposure the scanner I have is a dedicated scanner and is new. I do make sure it is really clean before I scan using the blower. I do the same with the film before I scan. Other than that I don't do anything. I also scan pretty much as soon as the film is dried and not too high resolution as it is only for the internet.
Actually think the crop works really well. The photo is nicely composed. As you know, big fan of your project, but since you've been using the yashica, your project is now other worldly.
The canon is great. It is easy to use and scans well, but then I am not a pixel counter. There are some real anoraks out there when it comes to scanning.