I am currently on a phototrip around the Venus Bay area on the Eyre Peninsula in South Australia. The core of the phototrip is the sand dunes at Yanerbie:
I am currently on a phototrip around the Venus Bay area on the Eyre Peninsula in South Australia. The core of the phototrip is the sand dunes at Yanerbie:
I've finally found an 8x10 colour shot:
This is from my archives. It was taken with a Rolleiflex SL66 with a 50mm lens. I'm not sure when it was made. Sometime last year.
Here is another possibility for an 8x10 black and white shoot:
An overcast day with little wind is what is needed.
All this effort does raise the question of what place does large format black-and-white photography still hold today in a digital world full of colour images? It does seem to belong to yesterday's world.
It has more to do with craft and DIY ethos in reaction to the intense colour world of digital; a reaction that turns back to old 19th century processes and places an emphasis on the process rather than the end result. The results often seem flat.
I've been going through the 2012 film archive looking for the scoping work that I'd done for 8x10 black and white shoots in that year. This was one possibility.
The location is easily accessible from a car park and it is protected from the coastal winds.
The above interpretation was made with Rolleiflex SL66. I also experimented with a different portrait format.
This was made with a Leica MP-4 and slow film Ilford Pan F Plus 50 ASA:
I prefer the longer interpretation to the square one.
This snap of Bosch pears at the Adelaide Central Market just before we left for a break at Victor Harbor gave me an idea of a still life picture in the studio:
I could do this in the studio withe Rolleiflex 6006. The lighting would be different, as it would be window light. It would make a change from the macro studies that I had been doing.
I no longer have a darkroom and I don't want to build one at Victor Harbour. I can't stand the chemicals, they play havoc with my skin, and I'm happy with digital files rather than the fine print made in the darkroom. I'm not a good printer.
That creates a problem with my 8x10 black and white photography. How do I develop the negatives? Up to now I have sent the 8x10 negatives to a pro-lab inSydney--Blanco Negro--- to be developed. It proved expensive to develop 24 negatives--- I only have 12 double film holders.
I've always thought it would be much more convenient to develop the 8x10 negatives in Adelaide at a community darkroom, even if that does mean DIY. Thankfully, one now exists--- The Analogue Laboratory, which is now situated at The Mill in Adelaide's CBD. What a great initiative!
It is much cheaper if I do it myself and Ii represents a return to the craft skills of photography that I was trained in. I used to tray develop sheet film in the Bowden studio, but it appears that DIY at the Analogue Lab involves sheet film clasped in hangers that are then gently dipped up and down in a tank.
You can develop more film in one go, so it is more efficient than the tray development that I used to do. I guess the next step is using a Jobo 3000 series Expert Drum at home. Jobo, however, went insolvent in 2010.
I'm looking forward to my first darkroom session this Sunday.
I finally managed to use the old Cambo SC monorail to make some 8x10 colour pictures of the bark of the redgum in the reserve.
I mucked up one exposure---the first one--- as I'd forgotten to take off the yellow filter on the Schneider Symmar 210 mm lens that I'd been using for my black and white exposures.
The next step is take the sheet film to Atkins Technicolour to have them to process the negatives. That service will not be cheap-- probably around $16.50 for one sheet of film. The next step is to scan the negatives myself with the Epson V700 scanner.
I did two abstractions of the peeling bark in the open shade:
I'm not sure that 8x10 colour is an economic proposition or that it is worth the expense. I had the sheet film in the fridge and I needed to use it before it expired.
I've started back working on my sea abstracts and pink gum and Xanthorrhoea projects which have been constructed in terms of DIY books in progress. It has been several months since I worked on them. I've been waiting for Posthaven to get their publishing platform up and running after migrating the work from Posterous.
I've also been scoping for subjects for an 8x10 colour shoot. The new Toyo double sided film holders are loaded with film--Kodak Ecktar 100ASA. I've returned to a number of locations that I had in mind, but winter has changed things dramatically. The winter grasses have returned and its a green world now as opposed to the dry landscape of a few months ago.
It's been frustrating as possible location after location has been rejected. I'm going to have to start with a couple of abstracts of the redgum trunks in the reserve across the road from the studio.
Due to the recent changes to Flickr by Yahoo I am in the process of moving away from Flickr and setting up a photostream at Ipernity. I'm moving even though Flickr is still the most commonly used photo sharing site and it is more dynamic now.
Flickr has been re-designed for iPhoneography. Yahoo's culture of design is one of people developing brands and imposing it on people, rather than building a culture of design that is rational, emotional and meaningful. The thing I hate most at the moment is when you click out of your stream of contacts' photos you are set back down at the beginning. This completely defeats any social aspect and flings everyone into the everychanging present...no time to comment or reflect just stay at the latest photo.
The new design is for the iphone crowd, but it is monetization that is killing the photo-sharing platform. It's time to move on.
It appears that there has been a mass migration of the old school Flickr film photographers to Ipernity. I have followed them because of my desire to belong to this kind of photographic community. Ipernity has a design that respects the photos much more than Flickr, but it is a very quiet place. Maybe that will change with the recent influx. Film is not dead, but it will only get more expensive in the future.
I hope the recent influx of photographers to Ipernity revitalizes the site, as the work by those community of photographers who take their photography seriously is very important to me. Studying other people's work is how I learn to take better photographs. I no longer read photography books to do this, as I once did.
I have finally had the batteries for the Rolleiflex 6006 system repacked by a battery outfit in Thebarton. The previous attempt to repack them in Adelaide was a failure, as the person doing it didn’t know what they were doing. The batteries, though new, would not recharge, and, if I couldn’t find anyone else in Adelaide to repack them, I was faced with sending things back to Rollei in Germany.
The 6006 is a bulky 1990s system, but a good one that I use regularly. However, the battery pack is an old fashioned one, and over time it holds less and less charge. Without the batteries the electronic cameras become expensive doorstops. This system had been out of action for six months because I couldn't find anyone to repack the batteries properly.
I'm happy that things up and running as it means that I can do more table top pictures in the studio.