avatar by buizelbub!
header by pinnapop!
ΘΔ


kobold-wyx
@kobold-wyx

art by shaferbrown@twitter

i wrote a really good details and my page upload broke and i dont feel like rewriting it so if anyone needs a better image description i will fix it upon request

Items in inventory:

  • wyx's wand
  • a slice of watermelon
  • pile of meat with a bone sticking out
  • empty flasks
  • rubber chicken on a pulley
  • a lockpickaxe
  • a potion filled with brew
  • a labion terror beast whistle


kory
@kory

I had loaded a roll of Kodak Tri-X 400 black and white film in one of my Hasselblad film backs intending to use it one night, but never got around to it. It was just sitting there for a while taking up space, so I decided to finally try out a technique I had learned about in a YouTube video (love this channel, btw!). This method, referred to as trichrome photography, allows you to produce some rudimentary color photos using black and white film. I started with a "dry run" on my X-Pro2 just to make sure I had the technique down before burning through film--basically, you line up a composition and take three sequential monochrome exposures using red, green, and blue filters, making sure to keep the exposure roughly equivalent when accounting for light loss through the filter. This next part can still be done in an analog fashion, but digital files and Photoshop make it much easier: import each of these as the "R," G," and "B" channels, respectively, and line everything up. Voila! Now you have a pretty terrible color photograph that took way too much effort to make and has all sorts of weird misregistration artifacts!

Anyway, emboldened by some modest success with the digital method, I set up my 500 c/m with the 150 f/4 lens and grabbed three exposures of the scene you see above. I was using a metered pentaprism, which made setting the exposures dead simple since it was all TTL. As I was about to shoot I noticed a lone sailboat drifting into frame, which was a perfect bit of serendipity--this added a cute little element to the scene and, perhaps more importantly, an easy way to tell which exposure was which just by noting its progress passing from left to right. The blue one is a bit hard to make out, but those three colorful little vessels are the same white sailboat!

I chose this composition because it provided a strong, immobile central subject (the bridge, obvously!) with lots of little shifting variable details to demonstrate some of the wild uncanny effects you can get with trichrome photography. My favorite is probably the otherworldly iridescence of the water surface, though other elements like the misaligned-projection-TV clouds or the technicolor specters of the passing traffic add to the subtle weirdness of the scene. I took a few others similar photos that day, but this was definitely the standout for me--it's also worth noting that you can only make 4 of these in 6x6 on a 120 roll (or fewer if you happen to bump your tripod in the middle of a series! who would do that?? :')). If you want to learn some more about this technique and other early approaches to color photography, I highly recommend this video by Technology Connections (another favorite YT channel!).


atomicthumbs
@atomicthumbs

this is the one text exposure I did, taken on my om-4ti, on the same roll as my other desert images for my big project: hp5+ pushed to 1600. i predicted that since i'm pushing the film til it screams, a color photo taken on it would have a characteristic "sick as hell" look that's unique to trichrome, since color grain and b&w grain function differently (dye clouds vs. silver crystals)

I want to do this more seriously and more, but I need proper separation filters and maybe a calibration target for the foreground corner. I'd love a color wheel but there is no turnkey solution for this, so I'd have to build one.

earlier this year I missed out on a "Devin" one-shot large-format tricolor camera, which used three film holders with individual filters and an enormous beamsplitter prism. I felt it would be ideal for me since my name is also Devin, but a snipe bidder decided they'd pay more than $450 for it



lunasorcery
@lunasorcery

Figured it's about time I actually posted on this thing properly, so here's a project of mine from earlier this year that I think y'all will appreciate -

-> http://tiredand.gay/wordle/ <-

It's a Netscape 1.0-compatible implementation of Wordle, complete with the rules page, a high-contrast colorblind mode, and an ASCII-art score system for e-mailing to your friends! It uses the wordlist from the original pre-NYT version of Wordle.

It's all powered by about 600 lines of absolutely atrocious cgi-bin python, of which I am both incredibly proud and deeply ashamed.

I started out developing it for Netscape 4.04, using features like tables and inline styling with the <font> tag, but kept pushing myself to support further and further back. The colored letters eventually got replaced with pre-rendered images, and while the layout tables are still present, Netscape 1.0 doesn't support them, so there are some wonderfully hacky <br> tags inside each row to ensure the correct layout.

I'm particularly fond of the smaller non-technical details to make it period-appropriate:

  • The exclamation point after the name, to add a little '90s whimsy
  • The use of e-mail as the suggested way to share scores, as well as the deliberate hyphen in 'e-mail' — in my experience 'email' is the preferred spelling nowadays.
  • The comment alongside the <meta viewport="..."> tag to lampshade its anachronistic nature.