Tomorrow morning I'm heading to Coal City to photography
the aftermath and the Red Cross aid efforts from last nights tornado. It can be quite delicate to be asked to photograph after such a devastating event, I hope my images can help the town and the continued efforts of the Red Cross.
June 23, 2015
June 8, 2015
Stretching the Limits...
The early afternoon weather was so nice downtown we took an impromptu field trip to get my class started on their next shooting assignment.
I grabbed the Canon tilt/shift 17mm and mounted it to my (beater) MkII body just to play around a bit.
Stitching shifted files is nothing new but, MAN when it's a 17mm I'm still blown away every time!
Here are vertical and horizontal stitches of the largest barge mounted crane I've ever seen!
May 15, 2015
our future...in Plastics...
Maybe the
recent announcement of Harrington being 'taught out' (which is a mildly fancy
of saying closed) that is causing a sense of nostalgia, maybe it's a couple
faculty and staff members who are also showing a renewed excitement and
enthusiasm to again shoot film, I'm not sure what it is, but I've found myself
in the basement rejuvenating some old one-off creations as well as designing
and building cameras again. I've been
doing this for years but the ease of digital and demands of daily life has
nearly made the desire to design and build cameras almost extinct.
Not sure
what it was that rekindled the ember and honestly, I don't care, I'm glad it's
back.
Which got
me thinking. My projects have always
been driven mostly by the 'why' while the 'how' was generally dictated by the
means at my disposal. Whatever camera
components and raw materials were at my disposal would be fashioned onto
something new. Here is my 6x17 'torpedo' camera and a 24mm x 4 1/2 camera that I shot with for
years.
Both got
the job done, and in most cases quite well but as I'm getting older I find
myself wanting to carry less and do more.
I'm reminded of the line from movie 'The Graduate' predicting (rightfully so I should add) the strong future in Plastics. Which also reminds of this
guy: Lance Criscuolo a tried and true
Texan who I photographed at Chicago Ideas Week (a smaller version of The Ted
Talks). His company Zyvex Technologies
develops (in his words) ‘Carbon fiber on steroids.’ Here is his talk
about recruiting and maintaining talent in the midwest if you wanna check it out:
So I told
you all that so I can show you this:
I've always loved the look of the 65mm on 4x5 which I roughly equivalent
to a 20mm on 35mm. Oddly enough, I shoot
mostly with a 24mm on 35mm, but anyway...
Almost 20 years ago I built this 4x5 super wide and got a remarkable amount of use out of it, both for personal work and a ton when I was the photographer at The Museum of Science and Industry.
Digital came in and I
jumped in head first without even thinking twice. I love shooting digitally, it's current
iteration is fantastic. I can truly make images that weren't possible ten years
ago. The sharpness digital is capable is
staggering. But as I said at the beginning,
I'm longing for something else, something comfortable maybe, or possibly
something different then everything that I've been inundated with. I started dusting off some of the film cameras that I still have and began regretting the ones that I've sold off over the years. Particularly I've been missing my 4x5 super wide. So I sat down to design something more
functional then my last one I came up with this. Smaller with a rotating back (same huge finder) it achieved
every goal I set out to solve but I forgot to consult my back. Machined from solid hardwoods on a backbone
of Cambo components it's quite solid, which we all know is a fancy way of
saying heavy.
Enter
the Travelwide by Wanderlust Camera, made right here in Chicago. A brilliant idea for a lightweight ABS camera that accommodates either a helical mounted 90mm Angulon or a fixed focus
65mm Super Angulon. Sounds perfect and as they are still
hammering out details and refining production runs and aren’t shipping cameras (or returning emails) yet.
Being impatient,
I started making measurements of my Harmon Titan 4x5 Pinhole that was sitting on my desk and low and behold
(that phrase is straight from my 74 year old mom btw) once you remove the
pinhole and plane front flat the flange to focal plane distance is just about the perfect distance needed for focus free, point and shoot operation.
Here are
a couple shots from its maiden run at the recently tornado stricken town of Fairdale
Illinois.
Filtering the Lomo LC-Wide for Black and White
For a little while I've been shooting with the amazing Lomography LC-Wide. a pocketable fully auto camera with a surprisingly sharp 17mm f/4.5 lens. Super small and and easy to keep on you.
I recently started developing black and white again and have unearthed a small stash of outdated 3200 TMax and Delta 35mm film.
Seemed like a perfect film stock to accompany the gritty (and amazing) look for the LC-Wide but there wasn't an easy way to pop an orange or red filter on the camera when shooting during the daytime. While clicking around waiting for my brain to fall asleep, I realized the LC-Wide Instant Kit might do the trick.
I got the kit and popped out the lens that focuses the instant film and made a little templet of the opening left behind. Using a little wet/dry sand paper the white lettering surrounding the auxiliary lens was removed, wouldn't want to confuse anyone :) A little plastic airplane glue and my r25 filter was attached perfectly in the magnetic lens holder.
Now I can pop on and off a red filter just as easy as can be. I should note that the red filter absorbs 3 full stops of light so don't forget to roll the ASA control (OK Lomo...this required me to get my reading glasses out #@!#??!!) back to ASA 400 when you are going to use the red filter to properly expose your negatives.
I'll post some pictures after I run the next batch of film.
I recently started developing black and white again and have unearthed a small stash of outdated 3200 TMax and Delta 35mm film.
Seemed like a perfect film stock to accompany the gritty (and amazing) look for the LC-Wide but there wasn't an easy way to pop an orange or red filter on the camera when shooting during the daytime. While clicking around waiting for my brain to fall asleep, I realized the LC-Wide Instant Kit might do the trick.
I got the kit and popped out the lens that focuses the instant film and made a little templet of the opening left behind. Using a little wet/dry sand paper the white lettering surrounding the auxiliary lens was removed, wouldn't want to confuse anyone :) A little plastic airplane glue and my r25 filter was attached perfectly in the magnetic lens holder.
Now I can pop on and off a red filter just as easy as can be. I should note that the red filter absorbs 3 full stops of light so don't forget to roll the ASA control (OK Lomo...this required me to get my reading glasses out #@!#??!!) back to ASA 400 when you are going to use the red filter to properly expose your negatives.
I'll post some pictures after I run the next batch of film.