Fotoweek DC 2009: 1st Place Sports Photography
My photo, By Dawn’s Early Light, won first place in the Sports category at last night’s Fotoweek DC Awards Gala. The photo shows the first wave of racers in the 2009 Nation’s Triathlon as they swim up the Potomac River past the Lincoln Memorial.
Limited edition prints are now available for purchase:
- Mini Wallets (set of 8), Edition of 300 sets, $10.00
- 10×12, Edition of 100 prints, $150
- 16×24, Edition of 25 prints, $300
- 20×30, Edition of 10 prints, $375
- 24×36, Edition of 10 prints, $450
Each image is printed on professional papers including Kodak Endura E-Surface and Ilford’s True B&W. Both feature 100 year archival value, and will stand the test of time. Your prints are going to look great for a long time.
For the next week my photo will hang at Fotoweek Central located in Georgetown starting tonight through November 14, 2009.
Fotoweek Central 1
3338 M Street, NW
Washington, DC 20007
True B&W Paper (Matte Finish)
There is a difference between B&W and true digital B&W prints! This panchromatic, resin-coated paper is specifically designed for making continuous-tone B&W prints directly from digital images in digital exposing systems.
This paper also provides excellent tone reproduction from digital camera files, scanned color slides or negatives. Because the emulsion is silver-based rather than dye-based, the imaging performance and characteristics of this paper are the same as traditional b&w continuous-tone papers. That translates to neutral tonal characteristics that provide the paper with display and archival qualities.
One added benefit is that the resin-coated paper is specially coated on the back to accept ink, making it a good surface for crop lines or writing notes.
E-Surface Paper (Matte Finish)
Kodak Professional Supra Endura VC Digital Paper (aka Traditional E-Surface Paper) is by far our most popular paper. Accurate color, realistic saturation, excellent neutral flesh reproduction and brighter colors are just a few of the attributes to describe E-Surface paper.
You will see excellent skin-tone reproduction, as well as brighter blues, cyans, purples, and reds.
With this paper don’t worry about prints fading. The standard archival value is 100 years in home display and 200 years in dark storage.
