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Julian Tanase Photography

My Minox journey continues…

Agfa APX 400 pushed to 1600 – when needs must

Agfa APX 400 pushed to 1600 – when needs must

During a business trip in Slovakia, deep and up in the Tatra mountains. The weather forecast was telling of upcoming bad weather, but as I am a mountain person myself, I was not at all surprised, nor did I need the warning. I could feel the storm brewing, long before I read the forecast; the air becomes crisp, luminosity changes to sort of dull, wind picks up, and of course, the dark descends.

For someone who was born up there and had lived in the mountains, this foretelling is something that can’t really be explained, it’s more like a feeling in the bones. What is certain is that, summer or winter, a change in weather comes fast. At times, if caught unaware, a tourist can get in really serious trouble, mainly from hypothermia and exhaustion, even in the summer. Severe drop in temperature, slippery ground, lighting and fast flooding >>> very dangerous!

These summer storms are not a lengthy affair, usually. They can take 5 minutes, they can take one hour; anything more than that is a sign of a long time indoors or well sheltered, if out in the open.

These photographs were taken with a Nikon FM3a, loaded with Agfa APX 400. About half of the film was shot at that speed, but when dark descended, I literally had no choice but to switch to 1600 ASA. Not a thing I would normally do on the same film with a 400 ASA, but the mountain and the storm decided for me, in this case.

Lens wise, I was shooting some closeups in the forest, with a Nikkor 105/2.5 AI, instead of my 135/2.8 which was not in my bag. To be honest, the storm came so fast, that I didn’t even time to switch to the 50/2. Yes, that fast.

Processed in Rodinal, which probably was not the best choice. Anyways, the results are grainy, how could it be otherwise. The grain is the size of gravel in at least of couple of the photograph, but I embrace it because it adds to the grittiness of the moment and place. I could get rid of that grain in post, but why would I do that? It would not be fair to the mountain.

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