It's been more than hectic at work this week, so I haven't even taken my camera out of its bag this week, let alone had anything processed. However, I have been practising the sharpening techniques that Leon and Photo Utopia (et al) very kindly relayed to me in the week when I was making such a right royal mess of my scans.
This one is a crop from a shot I took on Kodak 100 TMX using my old Bronica SQ-B and probably the Zenzanon PS40mm lens (looking at the distortion around the edge of the shot that I cropped out).
The chap in the photo was digging out smouldering / burning pulped tree bark. They'd cut some trees down and put them through a pulper and stacked the chippings in a big heap. Without realising it, they'd created the ideal environment for spontaneous fermentation. The microbes in the pile had multiplied, due to the high moisture levels, and caused an exothermic reaction. The heat created caused a "fermentation" which started to give off a lot of smoke, causing problems for car visibility on the road adjacent. Thankfully, they caught it before it got out of hand and caused a real big fire.
Sorry, I work as an technical underwriting manager for an insurance company head office in London. The causes or fire, how to detect them and how to put them out is important to me......well, it takes all sorts