Thomas Maschke (the editor) kindly asked me to post the notification about their new analog photo magazine, namely PhotoKlassik, on our site. How could I ever refuse such a proposal! PhotoKlassik, for now, comes only in printed form, and in German language. Anyway, those of you dear Readers who speak German (and there are so many German visitors on our blog, at least 30%) can be glad to have another quality publication in our realm. For the others, we can just hope an English version will follow soon. And maybe also a web version (or at least the excerpts). I just wish to the PhotoKlassik team to keep the good work going on!
10.12.12
3.12.12
Let the Drum Scanner be the Judge of Your Shots!
It's been quite a while since we've been posting anything here. But I thought that would well be worth to post, to demistify certain misconceptions about the "high" resolution of contemporary consumer (or even prosumer) scanners. Fact is, our featured (and excellent, too) photographer, Margus has been in the "drum scanner business" (so to speak) for quite a while. And he's got enough guts to take the bumpy (and expensive) road to restore a drum scanner back in working order. Bravo!
Anyway, I dared to post a couple of photos (retrieved from his photostream). These pics very explicitely show the obvious superiority of a drum scanner, even though with such a "low" (nominal) resolution of 3000 ppi and the "modest" Dmax of 3.6.
Copyright Margus Sootla. Retrieved from Flickr. |
Copyright Margus Sootla. Retrieved from Flickr. |
Now, a question arises very naturally: if drum scanners would be more common (=affordable to use) in the past years, how many more photographers would stick with film (or at least for a much longer time)???
Margus, my very compliments for the excellent scanner restoration job!
Mitja
5.11.12
Monday Column which is Not a Column, It's about the Schedule
Many many times in a lifetime things just get complicated and/or overcrowded. Looks like that the very same situation happened to the blog's authors as well (albeit to each one due to different circumstances, but personal issues anyway). It thus became to us (Matjaž and me) a bit difficult to keep the blog running in the same manner as we have been for a few months so far. No, we are not shutting down the blog, only the posts will be updated somewhat less regularly as they have been so far. We hope you understand. But we also want to thank all of you who have participated so far-it was really a refreshing experience!
Oh, about the new scanner I got more than a week ago: yesterday I finally unboxed the whole thing...and tested a few mounted slides, but without playing aruound with the adjustments (in the scanner software). Below, there is a scan from a Kodak Elite slide (not Extra Color) made at 3000 dpi, slightly sharpened with unsharp mask (and reduced red saturation) in Gimp. Clearly, there is a lot of room for improvement in the scanning approach with this Plustek. Reportedly, the scanner does its best when scanning at the maximum 7200 dpi, then resizing down to 3200-3600 dpi. Trouble is, if you own a 5-year old computer like mine, it's just too slow to do the job done in a reasonable amount of time. So for now, I am just bound to use that scanner at some low to mid point of its performance- until I get a new PC.....yes, this IS consumerism!
2.11.12
Cottage Tip: Building a small exposure meter-Part III
When
I finally got a working panel voltmeter (measuring range 200 mV) I got an
unpleasant surprise; it needs a separate supply, other than the circuit, but it
wasn't specified in the catalog I bought from. There are also voltmeters able
to share the same power supply with the rest of the circuit (the so-called
common-ground type), but unluckily not this one. So I needed first to make
somehow a split power supply with the same battery for both the sensor circuit
and the voltmeter, with the available resources. So I redesigned the circuit a
bit. The aim is to keep both voltages (for the meter and the sensor) as »far
away« as possible from each other, preventing to get faulty readings. Below,
see the circuit schematics.
After
that, I needed to do a quick test to such a circuit on the breadboard. I also
needed to do a short-circuit on one contact pair on the voltmeter, in orderto
get into the 200 mV range (following the instructions). Oddly, there was already
one short-circuit present (factory-made). These »shorts« also set the decimal
point. So two decimal points are now present. Nothing dramatic, only funny
somehow (note in the photo).
I
then made the apertures on the enclosure for the display, the sensor and the
activating switch. The battery holder is just an ordinary AAA battery holder
shortened by about 15 mm and glued together (the batteries A23 and AAA are of
the same width).
the battery holder |
Finally,
I put everything inside the enclosure: switch, panel meter, sensor, circuit and
battery-using solder and glue. As it seems, it works nicely! Now, a necessary
addition should be to mount (below the panel meter) also an exposure
calculator wheel to be able to set the exposure settings. But I first need
to buy some plastic printable film to do that.
The inside of the exposure meter |
The finished "product" |
Should
the precision of the meter be a bit off, I will still need to change the Zener
diode in charge to power the panel meter, i.e. using one with a bit lower
voltage-just enough to ensure the meter to work, by changing the existing diode
in the circuit with another one.
31.10.12
Portfolio of the Week: Kit Yip
Dear Readers,
This week we moved quite a bit east, to Hong Kong and it's my pleasure to introduce Kit Yip and her featured work. She started her photographic journey in 2006. She states that her photos are are mostly inspired by light and shadow, as well as character and mood. But I would add the she is also a master of bokeh (check the photos, what a subtlety!). When chance occurs, she promptly joins to collaborate with other artists and models, since it's always a good learning experience one can draw from such a circumstance. She describes herself as wanderer in her spare time, being that very wandering in the streets her major source of inspiration. As for the films and cameras used; she uses a really wide range of films and cameras. However, her mostly used cameras are a Leica M and a Hasselblad, being always carried around. Nice choice, Kit! You can get a grasp of Kit's work on Flickr and her Facebook page. Enjoy!
MitjaThis week we moved quite a bit east, to Hong Kong and it's my pleasure to introduce Kit Yip and her featured work. She started her photographic journey in 2006. She states that her photos are are mostly inspired by light and shadow, as well as character and mood. But I would add the she is also a master of bokeh (check the photos, what a subtlety!). When chance occurs, she promptly joins to collaborate with other artists and models, since it's always a good learning experience one can draw from such a circumstance. She describes herself as wanderer in her spare time, being that very wandering in the streets her major source of inspiration. As for the films and cameras used; she uses a really wide range of films and cameras. However, her mostly used cameras are a Leica M and a Hasselblad, being always carried around. Nice choice, Kit! You can get a grasp of Kit's work on Flickr and her Facebook page. Enjoy!
All photos copyright: Kit Yip
29.10.12
Monday Column: Is Analogue Photographer not Hooked by Consumerism?
We all live in consumer capitalism, where big (and small)
corporation by ads make our needs. As photographers we are targeted by the corporation
which produces all sorts of photographic equipment. The pace of new products is
higher and higher every year, but in the photographic markets with
digitalisation is this trend even higher. Corporations make our needs of
photographic equipment, by minor tweaks of existing stuff and advertising them
as revolutionary change that you must have and that it would change our picture
making from amateur to professional. When we fell for it (and we all in some
sort of another do), then we are hooked by self propelling chain of consumer
hell. Did your pictures, with your brand new revolutionary camera, look the
same as they did with your old camera? Then you need the super new lens(es). Still
not happy? Maybe you can improve them with new tripod, or some other accessory!
Wait, your computer can not process the huge amount the new huge raw files of
your brand new camera? Maybe is there an answer on the computer market for this
(think fruit), you can get also a new version of your favorite software for
editing your picture. And then you need the new printer to print bigger prints.
Are still not happy with your pictures? Maybe the next year new revolutionary
camera with missing features will improve your work! You get the point.
So, we get stockpiling “old” unused still capable equipment
on our shelves, worthless for the used market in the case of the “old” used digital
cameras. But what about analogue photographers? There are no new revolutionary
products every year. The old cameras are those who are more interesting. We don’t
leave them to collect dust; we repair them, lubricate and take them on
photographic trips time to time. Just the right thing to get off the hook of
modern consumer world... But if you need the new revolutionary scanner, you are
on again!
Matjaž
26.10.12
Scanners: The »Missing Link« finally arrived!
It's
been a while since I used to use my own, now defunct film scanner. It was a
flatbed Mustek Bearpaw with the transmission mode scan option. It wasn't a stellar scanner, but you could scan 35 mm
images and get a decent quality 20x30cm prints from a Frontier machine, or a
decent A4 inkjet contact negative to use with alternative photo techniques. But
it died some years ago....well, it's performance did (and who will ever repair
an obsolete scanner?). All in all, it wasn't a bad scanner considering the price
at the time. For a couple of years I was actually relying only on outsourced
scanning-be it made by a friend or by a photo lab. Fact is that I was shooting
mostly slide film in that period and scanned only selected images. Fact is also
that all that time I was toying with the idea of getting a »serious«, medium
format scanner. MF scanner prices were never low (new or used ones), but looks
like their prices even skyrocketed a bit in the past time (for respectable used
models). Then, I was waiting for the (so long) announced OpticFilm 120-until
its price has been disclosed...no, thanks, I said-for such an extra premium in
price I can rely on outsourcing for scanning medium format film, for many many
years. So I got annoyed of myself not being able to decide which scanner to
get. And owning a good scanner is always a good thing....
Anyway,
finally I decided to get a Plustek scanner, more precisely the 8200i SE model. Just arrived yesterday! I am still in the need to install it, can't wait for the weekend to test it!
I
chose the intermediate model of this Plustek scanner line, since the 8100 model
doesn't have the nice and useful feature of IR detection (and removal) of scratches and dust
particles, while the 8200 Ai model costing over 50 % more than the 8200 SE (and
more than double of the 8100), but having the auto IT8 calibration feature seemed
to me way too much. Optically-sensor and lens wise-all 3 scanners are identical,
save the mentioned features. While the IT8 calibration is surely a nice (and expensive addition), it can be compensated by a much cheaper solution: you can shoot a test image of a (reasonably priced) color-checker chart (yes, those which became popular among digital photographers, but they existed also before...) and then set and save you color curve values in an image editor for any given film type. You can even borrow from someone a test chart for a day or so and have the job almost done. That's it! Anyone who ever worked in the darkroom for a while can get a grasp of such a procedure. And, if you really want to go crazy, you can buy ready-made IT8 targets on specific film emulsions-check this link for these outrageous prices! If I knew before, that would be my best investment in a Kodachrome film....just kidding
Note: if you shoot only BW film, even the IR dust removal feature is useless, unless you are using chromogenic BW film. So in such a case you can save some money too.
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