lupi

cow of tailed snake (gay)

avatar by @citriccenobite

you can say "chimoora" instead of "cow of tailed snake" if you want. its a good pun.​


i ramble about aerospace sometimes
I take rocket photos and you can see them @aWildLupi


I have a terminal case of bovine pungiform encephalopathy, the bovine puns are cowmpulsory


they/them/moo where "moo" stands in for "you" or where it's funny, like "how are moo today, Lupi?" or "dancing with mooself"



Bovigender (click flag for more info!)
bovigender pride flag, by @arina-artemis (click for more info)



daddragon
@daddragon

Fort Penney & Its Defender


Saturday was super hot and completely cloudless, so when I went to the mall to get a hot dog in a cool bun the JC Penny's grabbed me.

I also really exercised the spot meter in the EOS 3. It kinda kicks ass, too. I'm starting to understand how to work exposure and what the zone system is useful for. The short version is "How far apart are your lows and highs in terms of exposure? Where do you want them to be?" I still need to get a sense for how the film reacts but the meter is extremely helpful. It's got memorization so I can grab a meter reading for a couple spots, and it'll plot them on a bar in the viewfinder and run an average (so darks are dark and lights are light).

I was gonna say I thought these were a little too hot, but I stared at them a bunch and rewrote this paragraph and now I kind of think it's right. The asphalt isn't too far off from the sidewalk in tone, and the overall brightness doesn't seem out of character. It was just so goddamn hot out, then sun was burning, but nothing's clipped to white for no reason. I think if I keep working at it I can develop a sense for this. Like importantly, the body of that gas meter is basically that tone. It's a strangely light blue-gray, and I metered that purposefully so I could land it where I thought it should go.

I dunno. I'm working it.

📷 Canon EOS 3
🎞 Rollei RPX 25 (mr rollei please make your film flatter i beg of you)
⚗ Rodinal 1+50 (just a widdle bit)
🖥 Minolta DiMAGE Scan Dual IV + VueScan

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in reply to @daddragon's post:

I think your metering was very successful! I’m impressed by how much detail can be found in the darks without the lights being overwhelming. And given your description of the weather that day, what you’ve accomplished in this exercise is especially skillful. The third image of the trees against the facade with those two scalene shadows revealing all the tonal variation of the bricks is my favorite.