Sunday, June 1, 2014

From: Photo.net

Whether the era of the camera affects the quality

John Evans , May 30, 2014; 05:22 p.m.
Hello,
I was wondering whether the era the camera is from affects the quality of the image. It seems to me that the only thing which affects the quality is the film, how it's processed and the lenses, whereas the camera only moves the shutter and rolls the film, which two mechanical functions any camera seem to either do or not do. So if the camera has say 1/1000 shutter speed, then not matter how cheap or old it is, it will do it the same way (unless it is broken), and the quality of the image therefore will be the same. The same applies, moreover to simply rolling the film (switching the exposure), which is the same in all cameras be they 10 or 100 000 dollars (unless broken). That is, I cannot see, how a camera which is more expensive or newer will open the shutter at a given speed "better" than any other camera: it either does it or it does not. So it seems to me (but maybe I am wrong), that the only things which affect the quality are the film, processing and lenses, whereas merely opening the shutter and rolling the film would be identical in any working camera.
So the first part of the question is
a) Is there any way the camera may affect the quality of the image (excluding the lenses)?
b) Since I only use old film cameras (both high and low end), from the 1930's to the 1970's, does that mean that if I will buy an expensive camera made in 2010, the quality will improve? Or will it be no different from buying only a modern expensive lens, and mounting it upon some old but good 1960s camera?
c) I also have a very old Kodak camera from the 1900s, which uses something between large and medium format (I was told that some available film could be cut to fit it). If I will use it, will my pictures look like they are from the 1900's, or will they look absolutely modern, because the film is modern? Will the era of this camera have any affect upon the quality?
Thanks!
Responses
 
JDM von Weinberg May 30, 2014; 05:46 p.m.
General answer: No.
More specific discussion. Such things as accuracy of lens to film plane distance and nature of pressure plate can also affect the image recorded on the film.
Only using old lenses with uncorrected flaws, lack of coatings (flare), and general design inadequacies (such as vignetting, CA, etc.) can create an "old look" and they will do what they can in that regard on any accurately built body, film or digital.
Old films are also a part of the "old picture" look, of course. If you're serious about that, you need to 'roll your own' with antique-era chemicals, emulsions, and so on. Friends here are doing wet-plate photography, for example. I'm told there are less poisonous ways of doing daguerreotypes, too.
Doug Grosjean , May 30, 2014; 05:46 p.m.
Answers to the best of my ability:
A. Consider the camera simply a fixture that holds film flat and perpendicular to the lens, and has a shutter that admits light. Assuming the film is held flat, the camera is light-tight, and the shutter timing is accurate; it's a good camera.
B. Can you buy an expensive film camera in 2010? But to answer your question, in my opinion, and based on my own experience, the quality of my photos has very little relationship to when the camera I shot them with was made.
C. Good question. I've shot on Kodak cameras from that era, using modern film. For example, using a Kodak Panoram from 1900 and color film. In that case, since there wasn't any color film back then, no. My photos don't look like they were taken in 1900. But assuming you shoot black-and-white film, the answer is still probably no, they won't look exactly like 1900's photos. But they will look very different from modern digital or 35mm.
The true measure of most photos isn't in what camera they were taken with, but whether they are well-composed images that provoke a response from the viewer. Your cameras are capable of that, regardless of what era they are from.
High quality lenses are nice, but... Sometimes a large negative with a so-so lens will do fine.
More depends on the photographer than on the camera.
Jochen Schrey , May 30, 2014; 05:55 p.m.
John, There are various breeds of 1/1000th second You may know the efect that FP shutters render a spinning "line" like spokes or a propeller as "banana". The higher the X synch speed of a FP shutter the better the 1/1000sec. - test shots could be done with Pentacon six (1/25 X) vs later Nikon 1/250 X.
Since I mentioned Pentacon already I would add that some mid price range older equipment is known for film winding issues. "Rollex Patent" roll holders too.
IMHO the era of a camera might have some impact on the functionality of its focusing aid. Its much easier to focus a contemporary Hasselblad with its extra bright screen in a dim jazz club than a vintage one. I can't focus the corners of my ground glass behind a Super Angulon WA lens at domestic lighting on "office" level.
b) Depends. A vintage Leica M body with beam divider in good shape should take stunning pictures with a modern lens. A similar vintage SLR might be too dim to focus. - OTOH I consider the older dim ground glass variants easier to handle in broad daylight than latest AF SLR's.
Maybe later film bodies offer better built in metering too. - Switching from spot to integral metering or even Matrix mode might help. - This doesn't mean it beats handheld meters and I can slam my Lunapro with the TTL metering sensor in a dedicated holder into any LF camera taking contemporary film holders.
c) in the 1900s they usually had no panchromatic film, ortho was quite a luxury. - If you filter everything besides UV & blue out you should get close to the old look.
Doug Grosjean , May 30, 2014; 06:14 p.m.
It might be more accurate to state that it affects the flavor, more than the quality.
Stephen Lewis  May 30, 2014; 07:49 p.m.
A - Some bodies had unique methods of ensuring the film was flat, like one Contax model which used a vacuum to flatten the film; or in some cases, slightly curved to match the curvature of the image from the lens. Also, the issue of shutter speed is an interesting one...what is critical is that the shutter consistently operate within certain tolerances at each speed. Often more costly cameras had tighter manufacturing tolerances and used higher quality mechanisms, sometimes employing different metals,, so that you ended up with consistency within the manufacturer's tolerance for longer periods of time, hence required less frequent repairs.
B - Some 2010 era film cameras, notably Leicas, had improvements from previous years, which will probably in the long run improve durability. The rangefinder/viewfinder on a certain model had reduced flair from the previous model. Will that have any affect on your photos - no.
C. Films from the early 1900s, as stated above were generally orthochromatic, and also had different grain characteristics. Generally you can do a pretty good job, especially if you are adept in the darkroom or at using digital tools, at achieving a look similar to that produced in earlier times.

Combining Kokak and Ilford chemicals?

Emily Mitchell , May 31, 2014; 05:59 p.m.
I have two questions if anyone is willing to help me out!
Question 1: Silly me, I bought Kodak brand Developer and Stop, and Ilford fix! Is it a problem to use them all together?
Question 2: This is the first time I've developed at home -- I was previously using my school darkroom where we could use tap water. However I now live in a place where the water is really, really hard. I bought a jug of distilled water, but as I have to do a final film rinse of 5 minutes, I don't think my gallon-size jug would be sufficient. (In regards to the final film rinse, the Kodak guide says: "Run the wash water at least fast enough to provide a complete change of water in the tank in 5 minutes." I'm not sure what this means ... can I pour in the water super slowly as long as all the original water gets rinsed out within 5 min?)
THANK YOU!

Responses

Jerry Thirsty ,  May 31, 2014; 06:11 p.m.
1. No problem
2. Assuming your developing tank can be inverted without spilling, look up "Ilford wash method" on the web for a much less water-intensive method (that still gets the job done).
Jean-Yves Mead , May 31, 2014; 06:17 p.m.
  1. No problems there. Developer and fixer don't interact anyway.
  2. Try the Ilford washing method using tap water at processing temperature, and save the distilled water for the final rinse:
    • fill with tap water, give five inversions, pour away water.
    • fill with tap water, give ten inversions, pour away water.
    • fill with tap water, give twenty inversions, pour away water.
    • fill with distilled water + wetting agent (if desired), soak for one minute, pour away water.
    • dry film.
    • have a beer to celebrate.
Lex Jenkins  May 31, 2014; 06:31 p.m.
Ditto, the Ilford wash method. I began using that several years ago when I lived in a rural home with well water heavy in minerals, especially lime scale. I used filtered well water for washing prints, and for the first washes of the developed negatives. I switched to the cheapest bottled distilled water I could find for the final film rinse with a drop of wetting agent.
Another tip (courtesy of Roger Hicks, either from one of his books or via the Compuserve forums years ago):
Suspend the strip of negatives diagonally to dry. Water will gravitate toward the lowest edge and drip from the single lowest corner. Any remaining residue from hard water will be confined to the edges of the film, away from the negative frames. For 35mm film I used "S" hooks from unfolded large paper clips, hooked through the sprocket holes. For medium format film I used mosquito hemostats to clamp the edges (medium format film has no sprocket holes). Both were suspended via heavy duty rubber bands, usually from the shower curtain overhead and from any handy projection at the bottom - the tub/shower faucets work fine for this.
No problems with dust because I ran a recirculating air filter 24/7 in the spare bath/utility room. The air circulation speeded up drying too.
via: Photo.net

Saturday, May 31, 2014



MOMMY PORTRAITS

Something that I look forward to as a photographer is the relationships I build with clients and how I can be there to document important moments in their lives. Tricia was the first woman to let me take her maternity photos and just recently I took some of her beautiful newborn baby girl, Gianna. Don’t they look beautiful?! Like mother, like daughter.
by: Anza

What film photography still has to offer

By Cubie King
New York (CNN) -- There are no more Polaroids. No more Kodachrome. And the smell of potent darkroom chemicals has almost disappeared.
For most people, "analog photography" is a relic or something their parents once used; an archaic technology now lumped in with yesteryear's sensations, like the rotary phone or 8-track tape player.
Over the past decade, the number of analog film and manual cameras has dramatically decreased in favor of their digital counterparts. Digital photography has ubiquitous control over the market, leaving little to no room for alternatives.
Yet in the New York City metro area, there is a close-knit community of photographers, merchants, galleries, institutions and darkrooms that keep the art of analog photography quietly in practice.
"[There's] just something inherently different about the medium that you can't get with digital," said Steven Sickle, who works at K&M Camera in Tribeca.
Some say that "something" is depth or quality.
K&M Camera, open since 1976, caters to photographers, from the first-time film student to the hardened fine-art photographer who refuses to use digital technology. The newly expanded store proudly embraces their connection to analog film. There are 35 mm cameras on display around the store and refrigerators and freezers stuffed with film.
Although digital sales mainly drive the store's profit line, the store continues to sell everything film-related, from darkroom chemicals to beakers, loupes and print paper.
"We still sell analog film in large bulks to all sort of clientele," Sickle said. "It's a lot of fun when you get guys that come into the store not knowing much and leaving knowing more about film and its process."
Uptown from K&M on 43rd Street is the International Center of Photography, where photographer/artist Lesly Deschler Canossi teaches a class on color printing to teens. Film negatives and prints are sprawled out in front of the students as they listen attentively to Canossi. She lays out the day's agenda before they head into the pitch-black darkroom.
The students quickly learn that it takes more patience than they initially thought to work with analog film. This patience is earned through hands-on experience with their negatives and in the darkroom and classroom discussions.
The center offers students of all ages more than 400 photography courses a year that cover such topics as lighting techniques, black-and-white printing and marketing their work.
"What we hope within the Teen Academy is that as they move forward, and if perhaps [they] switch to digital, they have a much better understanding of manual camera functions as it relates to film as it translates to digital," Canossi said.
Across the street from the school is the International Center of Photography's museum, which is exhibiting a retrospective of the work of world-renowned Magnum photographer Elliott Erwitt, recipient of the center's 2011 Lifetime Achievement Award. Throughout Erwitt's decades-long career, he's used only analog film.
Visitors can see quickly that Erwitt's talents closely reflect the diversity of the medium itself as he dabbles in almost every genre -- from portraiture, to street photography, documentary, fashion, humor and wit, and everyday life. Erwitt classifies himself as both a professional photographer and hobbyist.
"I'm a traditional photographer in that I don't use electronic devices," he said.
"I think I'd like to know that I'm taking pictures because I'm interested in the human condition, in stories and people and animals and whatever is in front of my lens," he said. "That's what drives me, not the latest gadget."
Downtown on 19th Street is Print Space, where photographers can rent well-designed darkrooms (black-and-white or color) to transfer negative images onto print paper. It's a cozy little establishment that transports photographers to another era. The smell of chemicals wafts through the air, and the pace of the staff and clientele seems to mimic the process of making a print: relaxed yet deliberate.
"There's something that's not so immediate about the analog world," said Hashem Eaddy, Print Space's lab manager. "You take a picture with your film camera, you have to wait. And all of those pieces have to come together so it'll be a print. Printing takes time, but the patient are rewarded.
"In terms of analog, for the most part, it still gives you a higher-quality print than digital, but I feel like the way people are looking at things now doesn't matter anymore," Eaddy lamented.
But to each of these people, organizations and establishments, film does indeed matter and continues to evolve. It's vital, not only to their livelihoods, but also as a gateway to a deeper understanding of the medium as a whole, even if one does end up in the digital arena.
To serious-minded photographers Erwitt added this: "I certainly would suggest that anyone interested in photography start by doing the hard stuff; that is to say print, photograph, develop, dodge, do all the things that are essential in producing a good analog print."
And like the variety of steps required to make that analog print, these practitioners, viewed as an amalgamation, form a community that continues to further the history, tradition and craft of analog photography.
The Film Photography Documentary List
Asked to choose my favourite five online photography documentaries I simply had too many favourites. And several of my best choices were no longer available to view. So I put together a fast list from my bookmarks list. I’ve tried to keep only the longer and more value packed video documentaries. I’ve also avoided any documentary that’s a part of a series – such as the BBC Master Photographer series from 1983, The Genius of Photography series, theVogue Masters series and The Wonderful World of Albert Kahn from 2007 and the Contacts (Vol 1-3) series – as I’ll be posting those links on other occasions. So, here goes… these documentaries should keep you going for a month or two of film entertainment.
  1. Edward Weston: The Photographer (1948) – 27 mins
  2. The Woodmans – 82 mins
  3. Henri Cartier-Bresson: Just Plain Love – 71 mins
  4. Henri Cartier-Bresson: Pen, Brush & Camera – 49 mins
  5. Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Decisive Moment – 18 mins
  6. Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Impassioned Eye – 70 mins
  7. Alfred Stieglitz: The Eloquent Eye (1999) – 83 mins
  8. J H Lartique (part 1part 2part 3 & part 4) – 29 mins
  9. What Remains: The Life & Work of Sally Mann – 80 mins
  10. David Bailey: Four Beats to the Bar and no Cheating – 52 mins
  11. Duffy: The Man who shot the Sixties – 54 mins
  12. Robert Capa: In Love and War – 84 mins
  13. Bob Capa Tells of Photographic Experiences Abroad (audio 1947) – 23 mins
  14. W. Eugene Smith: Photography Made Difficult (part 1part 2part 3,part 4part 5apart 5bpart 6part 7part 8 & part 9) – 90 mins
  15. The Lost Pictures of Eugene Smith – 38 mins
  16. The Life & Work of W. Eugene Smith – 79 mins
  17. Shooting War: World War II Combat Cameramen (part 1part 2part 3,part 4part 5part 6part 7part 8 & part 9) – 90 mins
  18. Sebastio Salgado: Looking Back at You (part 1part 2part 3part 4,part 5 & part 6) – 50 mins
  19. Salgado: Spectre of Hope – 51 mins
  20. Tina Modotti: Without Walls (part 1part 2part 3 & part 4 – 52 mins
  21. Man Ray: The man who invented himself – 39 mins
  22. Man Ray – 52 mins
  23. Bob Robinson: Capturing the Norwegians – 10 mins
  24. Meet Robert A Robinson: Photographer – 29 mins
  25. Don McCullin: Images of War – 24 mins
  26. Don McCulllin: Redundant Warrior – 24 mins
  27. Don McCullin: Seeking the Light – 27 mins
  28. McCullin (2012) – 91 mins
  29. Vietnam’s Unseen War – 53 mins
  30. Elliott Erwitt: Personal Best – 10 mins
  31. At Home with Elliott Erwitt – 10 mins
  32. Elliott Erwitt: Photographer – 22 mins
  33. Searching for Vivian Maier (part 1part 2 & part 3) – 33 mins
  34. Vivian Maier: Who took nanny’s pictures? – 68 mins
  35. Vivian Maier – 12 mins
  36. Bruce Gilden: Coney Island – 11 mins
  37. The Greatest Photojournalist: Alfred Eisenstadt – 28 mins
  38. Harold Feinstein: Photographer, artist, teacher, human being (part 1 &part 2) – 15 mins
  39. Ansel Adams: Photographer (1958) – 21 mins
  40. Ansel Adams: Photographer (1981) (part 1part 2part 3part 4 & part 5) – 59 mins
  41. Ansel Adams (2002) – 82 mins
  42. Frank Hurley (part 1part 2part 3part 4part 5 & part 6) – 60 mins
  43. Paul Strand: Under the Dark Cloth (part 1part 2part 3part 4part 5part 6) – 80 mins
  44. Richard Avedon: Darkness & Light – 86 mins
  45. Helmut Newton: Frames from the Edge – 100 mins
  46. Fire in the East: A Portrait of Robert Frank – 28 mins
  47. Leaving Home, Coming Home: A Portrait of Robert Frank (2005) – 49 mins
  48. Arnold Newman – 40 mins
  49. The Many Lives of William Klein (2012) – 59 mins
  50. In Conversation: William Klein – 111 mins
  51. Moriyama Daido: Near Equal – 84 mins
  52. Nobuyoshi Araki: Arakimentari – 75 mins
  53. Naked States – 74 mins
  54. Joel Meyerowitz: Street Photography (1981) – 57 mins
  55. Nan Golden: In My Life – 28 mins
  56. Imagine: The Colourful Mr Eggleston – 47 mins
  57. William Eggleston in the Real World – 85 mins
  58. Cindy Sherman: Nobody’s Here but Me (1994) – 55 mins
  59. Annie Leibovitz (1993) – 50 mins
  60. Jan Saudek – 91 mins
  61. The World according to Martin Parr – 44 mins
  62. Half Past Autumn: The Life & Work of Gordon Parkes – 90 mins
  63. Remembering LIFE – 57 mins
  64. America in Pictures: The Story of LIFE Magazine – 60 mins
  65. James Nachtwey: War Photographer – 96 mins
  66. Yousuf Karsh (part 1part 2 & part 3) – 26 mins
  67. The Real Weegee – 56 mins
  68. Six Photographs: Rennie Burri – 11 mins
  69. George Eastman: The Wizard of Photography (part 1part 2 & part 3) – 50 mins
  70. The History of Photography: Beaumont Newhall – 25 mins
  71. Laura Gilpin: The Enduring Photographer – 25 mins
  72. Eliot Porter: A Look Back (part 1 & part 2) – 25 mins
  73. Military Police Photography (1965) – 25 mins
  74. Eugene and Berenice – 52 mins
  75. The Lives of Lee Miller – 56 mins
  76. The Weird World of Eadweard Muybridge – 58 mins
  77. Eve and Marilyn (part 1part 2 & part 3) – 31 mins
  78. Tony Vaccaro: World War II Photographer – 17 mins
  79. George Rose, Stereographs and the Russo Japanese War – 20 mins
  80. The Lomo Camera: Shoot from the Hip – 59 mins
  81. Trent Park: Dreamlives (2002) – 25 mins
  82. Chester Higgins Jr: Capturing the Spirit – 27 mins
  83. National Geographic: The Last Roll of Kodachrome – 31 mins
  84. Born into Brothels (2004) – 83 mins
  85. A Great Day in Harlam: The Photograph (Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4,Part 5Part 6 & Part 7) – 59 mins
  86. Rankin: Shooting the Hollywood Stars – 66 mins
  87. South Africa in Pictures – 60 mins
  88. Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters – 77 mins
  89. Gregory Crewdson: Capturing a Movie Frame – 27 mins
  90. Legends in Light: George Hurrell – 56 mins
  91. Gursky World – 23 mins
  92. The History & Science of Color Film – 21 mins
  93. Visual Acoustics: The Modernism of Julius Shulman – 80 mins
  94. Edward Burtynsky: Manufactured Landscapes – 86 mins
  95. The Wonderful Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl – 189 mins
  96. Who Shot Rock and Roll: Akron Art Museum – 27 mins
  97. Bob Gruen: Rock and Roll Photographer – 27 mins
  98. Magnum Photos:The Changing of the Myth – 58 mins
  99. Long Live Film – 47 mins
  100. Geoff Davies: Photographer – 61 mins
  101. The Death of Kevin Carter – 27 mins
  102. Alexander Gardner: War Photographer – 44 mins
  103. Bob Marley: Giant – 18 mins

About the Author

My name is Steven Clark (aka nortypig) and I shoot film photography for fun. I have an MBA (Specialisation) and a Bachelor of Computing from the University of Tasmania. Currently in pursuit of investment for a local business venture. Dreams of owning the World. Idea champion. Paradox. Life partner to Megan.