The Tennis Club.
The photo depicts a former youth tennis club which has fallen to complete destruction due to the march of progress and the development of the train system connecting Melbourne and Ballarat.
Experiment of the Horizon.
This image is from my experimentation from the Zenit Horizon panoramic camera. The camera takes a 120° picture with this image being a black and white photo being taken of my parents’ first front yard.
Portrait of a Metal Man.
This image is a 35mm film photograph taken of a statue within the Queenscliff cemetery. I treated the metal sculpture as a human model and took portrait photos to bring some humanity to the inanimate object.
Flinders Street Station, Olympic Torch.
The image isn’t a traditional image but instead a scan of a black and white negative from the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. The original negative showed the Olympic torch in front of the Flinders Street Station. To get this image I tried to digitally edit the film to inverse the image instead I captured the scratches and damage to the film through discard.
Night-Time Experiment.
This image was an experimentation of capturing night-time photography with a film camera. It isn’t as clean and crisp as digital night photography, but it is still a great experiment.
Experiment of the Kiev 6C.
This was an experiment with a brand-new Kiev 6C medium format camera. I experimented with just taking photos within my house and exploring how well it would shoot and come out for my first experiment with a medium format camera.
Experiment of Nishika N8000 3D Camera.
This is a digital example of how the Nishika camera shoots. The camera shoots four images of the subject matter at slightly different angles to createthis 3D image. This experiment is a great example of how old camera can offer different angles of photography from modern day cameras.
The Boats Final Resting Place.
The image is of a sculpture attached to a gravestone. I wanted to explore the difference between digital photography and analogue photography, while more information is lost through analogue sometimes the more natural element from the film seems to connect better to this sculpture rather than digital photography.