"Fear is a darkroom where negatives develop." Usman B. Asif
10.7.12
9.7.12
Monday Column: Why a Vampire Can Not Be an Analog Photographer
As an analogue photographer you have all experienced how is to be hours and
hours in the darkroom. I don’t know about you, but I had, after several hours
in the darkroom in the middle of the night at local elementary school, a strange
feeling of presence. I knew that I was alone in the school, but... Hopefully I’m
not paranoiac, but as part of consumer of modern popular culture, we are all
bombarded with stories about supernatural creatures. And one of those creatures
fit perfectly in the dark lonely corridors of the empty local school in the middle
of the night.
Could be a vampire? A lonely sorrow creature craving for the
blood. And a lonely sorrow analogue photograph in the darkroom seems to be a
perfect target. Not! As commonly known, vampires have some deficiencies. Among allergy
for garlic and UV light is also allergy to silver. Be thankful to that, that
analogue photography is all about silver those days. In the modern films, the vampire killers uses bullets filled with silver nitrate for
killing vampires. So, if you are afraid of
the vampires, just keep some of used developer. After you develop a film or photographic paper, it has a lot of washed
away silver from not exposed parts of film in it. So in the
case of need, just pour it over the creature. Guarantee success. So you don’t need the garlic wreath on the
door of the darkroom. You could be sure that no vampire will come and bother
you, when you are printing your precious photos.
But hey! Maybe they are not so bad after all. And after all you could find
a brother soul in analogue photography? Oh, there is a problem. Photography is
all about light and vampires are allergic to the sunlight. But they could be nightlight
photographers and they could produce masterpieces like the Edward Steichen’s Pond
– Moonlight?
Edvard Steichen: Pond - Moonlight Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c8/ThePondMoonlight.jpg |
And others could develop and print the photographs for them, as
they did for the Henry Cartier Bresson (and many others photographers too). But
why they would bother? At present days, for night time photographers, you have are
more appropriately
suited tools.
A blasfemy for analogue photographers, but nevertheless, vampires goes digital. We already stated that when we are
talking about soul in photography, it is analogue. Vampires have no soul. So that’s
the ultimate reason, why a vampire could not (wont) be an analogue photographer.
They don’t even bother about, they have ISO 204,000.
7.7.12
Ashes to ashes, dust to dust
No, it's not a post about some Danse Macabre stuff....these were just my thoughts when we took a visit to Helmut Newton's grave in Berlin, back in May. First we took a mandatory visit to his museum on Jebensstrasse which is pretty easy to find, just behind the (in)famous Zoo Station. There, at the museum, you can really get a grasp of his life and work, glamorous and controversial, but also about more intimate aspects. And it takes a while to get through all three museum floors, too. Diametrically opposite is the impression when you visit his grave, unnoticeable and humble, just a few meters away from Marlene Dietrich (it was his wish to be buried there). We were lucky enough to meet two graveyard employees, so the quest was relatively short. I am not saying I was expecting a mausoleum or something, but realizing that one of the greatest photographers (his ashes, actually) is buried there, being visited only by a bunch of visitors, here and there, made me a bit sad. On the contrary, Marlene's grave gets much more visits (if you compare the stones put on the gravestone).
Bottom line: take care of yourself and of your dearest here and now. It won't really matter after.
Helmut Netown's grave in Berlin. |
Helmut is buried in the Städtischer Friedhof III cemetery, not really a "high point" of Berlin. Sadly, even many locals are not aware of the cemetery itself, let alone of Helmut's grave. Hint: it improves your chances to get in the right direction if you ask where is the cemetery where Marlene Dietrich is buried, but it's not necessarily 100% proof (that's our experience).
Mitja
Mitja
6.7.12
Random Quote
"In my experience I've learnt that they make an ordinary scene interesting and an interesting scene ordinary", Tim Hixson on plastic cameras. More about here.
Cottage Tip: Keeping Humidity under Control- Part 1
Humidity is one the worst enemies
of your cameras and lenses! We all know that under prolonged humid conditions,
especially if stored in the dark, fungal growth can begin inside your beloved
lenses! The best cure is, of course, keeping your equiment in constant use
(fungal growth is quite sensitive to light). But most of the time, our beloved
toys reside in a bag or a case, in the dark. Unless you live in an arid
environment, we need to make sure there is not enough moisture inside to
initiate the growth of the evil fungi! Fortunately, fungal growth is quite a
slow process, and won't happen overnight! Many photographers just put
(intuitively) inside a bag or two of silicagel they recycled from a shoe box or
other purchased goods. The problem is, this silicagel is probably already
exhausted, so it has no capacity left to absorb the moisture. Plus, it usually
has no color indication whether is exhausted or not. Most of the people just
put inside these little bags and forget about them for good! Fourtunately, most
people don't have problems with fungi, but some of them do, sadly.
This is all you need: fresh silicagel, a film canister and a sharp tool (e.g. scissors). Rightmost: a bag of exhausted silicagel. |
This is how a punched canister looks like. |
Left: film canister with fresh silicagel. Right: canister with exhausted silicagel, notice the color change. |
The real
solution to the problem is to buy silicagel beads with color indicator in
bulk-you can buy half a kilo or so for little money online. As the silicagel
gets too wet, it turns its color from orange to dark blue (it looks like caviar-before
and after-salmon before, beluga caviar after J). So, buy silicagel in
bulk, and you can regenerate it many times by (re)heating it! Next problem is
the container; I simply use a (translucent) film canister, finely punched along
its surface. Pour the dry silicagel inside and close the lid. A canister or two
will do their job for a few weeks or months inside the bag (or case), but not
forever! Moisture penetrates more than you can imagine inside your bags and
cases (unless you have everything sealed with plastics-not really practical),
so a regular check is advisable. When it comes to regenerate, simply put the
silicagel in a shallow (glass or metal) container or pan inside the kitchen
oven for an hour or so around 100 °C. When it turns back orange in color,
you're done! When not in use, keep your silicagel well sealed against moisture.
The humidity in your closet or drawer, where you keep your gear, is also
important. We'll cover this in the second part.
A note of caution: with time,
some fine dust will occur, due to silicagel's self-abrasion. Do not breathe the
dust, it's not friendly to your lungs!
Mitja
About Cottage Tips
Dear Readers,
As already promised, we'll
feature a series of technical contributions, and among them there will be the
so-called Cottage Tips. Essentially, it will be a »how-to« series of short (or
longer) posts, dealing with various inexpensive technical solutions for
improving your photo-gear, upgrading on a tight budget, or even making a piece
of equipment not available in the stores. Not necessarily all contributions
will be strictly dedicated to film photography, but also for general photographic
usage. I am sure some of the contributions you'll find very basic or redundant,
something you've been knowing about for ages, but most of them not. We also
need to keep in mind the newcomers to (film) photography; they need all the
information we can give them. On the long run, I am sure with these tips we can
make our photographic endeavours a little bit more comfortable, easier, and
hopefully cheaper, too.
silver regards
Mitja
4.7.12
Portfolio of the Week: Martina Woll
Dear Readers,
This week we
feature a German photographer, Martina Woll. Martina is an autodidact
photographer from Saarbrücken. She works in 35 mm (Canon EOS 3, Minolta SR-T
101, Yashica Electro 35GTN and others) and 6x6 (Mamiya C330S), as well as with
Fuji Instax and Holga cameras, with available light as her primary lighting
source. Her preferred films are Kodak Tri-X 400 and Agfa APX 100. She develops
BW films by herself, usually with Caffenol-C. Her photographic work and
interests range widely, very widely; from portraits to still life, to a variety
of vehicles, vessels (aircrafts), and other subjects. She also loves the
imperfections film has to offer: lightleaks, fluff, blur etc. Most of her
inspiration comes from the web, since there is a great deal of talented photographers'
work to be seen online, as she states. And she's right! Thus, she has no rigid
or exemplar rules about. She has already been featured in a number of
publications, including Playboy USA. Besides her portfolio, I personally like very
much her Smoking series of photos.
Untitled 13. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 18. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 7. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 64. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 33. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 6. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 31. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 99. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Untitled 100. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Kell. Copyright: Martina Woll |
Martina's work
can be seen on her website, her photostream on Flickr and Facebook. Enjoy the
photos!
silver regards
Mitja
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