
Kraków skyline
… prominently featuring the Mariacki church. Shot on Lomochrome film.

headstone
From a lovely cemetary in Lwów, Ukraine.
spring on Rekawka
Shot on Lomochrome film — the blue-yellow of the tree is transformed to a fluffy pink. I love the effect Richard Mosse achieved shooting with Aerochrome in the Congo. I haven’t managed to get my hands on any of that film, but this near-Infrafed film also creates interesting color changes in foliage.
parasol on the playa
Slide film cross-processed. Shot with a Lomo Minitar LCA.

winter window cat
… shot on film which expired in 1989, hence the strange color effect. My dad had a conversation with his dentist about shooting on film; the dentist gave him an unused roll of film that his wife had around the house. Expired film often produces unusual color effects, if you’re lucky.
barber
At the Barbie Day Spa.

Joe + Hannah
… taken in their garden in Cardiff, Wales. Several separate photos taken on my Lomo Minitar LCA stacked together, Hockney-style.

Smok Wawelski
The Kraków dragon statue near the castle, shot on “redscale” film — load the film backwards into the camera to produce a red / orange tinted image, since light has to pass through the film to get to the emulsion.

tea and conversation
Two frequent patrons of Bunkier Sztuki Cafę.

boatman at dawn
On the Ganges in Varanasi, India.

Monika smoking
Window overlooking Józefa in Kazimierz. Shot on Lomochrome film.

Alex
… shooting on Super 8.

Jenn
I always try to shoot the first image on the roll, even though I know it most likely won’t come out due to the first part of the film being exposed. Sometimes this produces compelling results, though.









