7 favorites     2 comments    244 visits

1/125 f/11.0 50.0 mm ISO 400

Zenza Bronica S2

NIKKOR-H 1:3.5 f=5cm

EXIF - See more details

Location

Lat, Lng:  
Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...

Pictorials Pictorials


'The Black & White' 'The Black & White'


120 Film Masters 120 Film Masters


I ♥ Film I ♥ Film


.film.forever. .film.forever.


120 film medium format 120 film medium format


I Shoot Film I Shoot Film


New Flickr Survivors New Flickr Survivors


Cucho B&W Cucho B&W


Planet Landscape Planet Landscape


Film Delight Film Delight


Coup de coeur !!! Coup de coeur !!!


California California


Photo Potpourri Photo Potpourri


6x6 6x6


Medium Format Medium Format


Bronica Bronica


Square Format Square Format


Film Photography Film Photography


San Francisco San Francisco


Rollfilm Rollfilm


Film Film


Black and White Black and White


See more...

Keywords

Sutro Baths Ruins
GGNRA
San Francisco
Zenza Bronica S2
Nikkor-H 1:3.5 f=5cm lens
Hoya HMC 82mm Y[K2] filter
Ilford HP5 Plus 400 film
Black & White
120 film
6 X 6
Medium Format
Epson Perfection V600
Photoshop Digitalization


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

244 visits


Ruins of Sutro Baths

Ruins of Sutro Baths
The Sutro Baths were constructed in 1894. The site had an ocean pool aquarium and a massive public bathhouse that could accommodate 10.000 people at one time. A classic Greek portal opened to a grandiose glass enclosure containing seven swimming pools at various temperatures. There were slides, trapezes, springboards and a high dive. The power of the Pacific Ocean during high tide could fill the 1.7 million gallons of water required for all the pools in just one hour. Over the decades the baths’ popularity declined. The end came in 1966 when a fire destroyed the structure.

This photo was taken by a Zenza Bronica S2 medium format film camera and Nikkor-H 1:3.5 f=5 cm lens with a Hoya HMC 82mm Y[K2] filter using Ilford HP5 Plus 400 film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitally rendered using Photoshop.

kiiti, Berny, Marco F. Delminho, Jean-luc Drouin and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo


Comments
 aNNa schramm
aNNa schramm club
great Information nad very nice in b/w - greetings aNNa*
4 years ago.
Scott Holcomb club has replied to aNNa schramm club
Thanks aNNa!
4 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.