
At the crossroads between the hot springs and the dump, Upper Owens Valley, CA. I’m enjoying the moment after shooting this in odd conditions and having the first test prints come out almost exactly how I envisioned it, and showing the potential for the final prints I want.
If you’ve never experienced the basin and range along the sheer granite wall that is the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada Mountains it can be hard to explain. The weather systems can change rapidly and the high altitude lets the sun assault you faster than you’d think. On days like the one I photographed this scene, I’d just been through whiteout conditions, high-winds, sideways snow, and although it was super sunny at the moment of this photo, it was quite cold but the sun was cooking my face.
I’d gone from 1 stop of light if I was lucky earlier that morning, to 8+ stops of light (but probably more as far as my film was concerned with its high UV sensitivity). I made sure to note the conditions so when I processed I ended up retracting the processing -2, in this case with temperature since the water out of the faucet was too cold for processing and needed to be heated anyways.
This is a scan of an 8×10 work print on Ilford MGFB (silver gelatin) paper, shot on Foma Ultra 100 (Arista EDU) black and white 35mm film, with a Canon F-1 camera and a 35mm f/2.0.