DML

Continuing adventures in Lo-Fi or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love taking my time

 

Okay its lame, very lame in fact, one paraphrased album name and one paraphrased film name, but hey! I need to lighten my blog posts up with something.

So, I’ve had my Zero Image 612 multi format pinhole camera for a couple of weeks now.  The pinhole camera itself is lovely, polished teak with brass finishings, it very much ticks my tactile box (in much the same way as Crane’s Silver Rag paper ticks it too!).  The great thing about the multi format is that it’s multi format, so I can switch between 6 x 12 to 6 x 9 to 6 x 6 to 6 x 4.5 film formats. I can’t see my self using the camera at 6 x 4.5 but the other formats hold some appeal, especially the 6 x 6 format for maybe trying out some still life.   My first four films have all been at 6 x12 (that’s the latent Xpan user coming out in me), but it does mean that you can only squeeze 6 shots out of a 120 roll.  Using Ilford FP4 that works out at £0.75 a shot if you are developing and scanning yourself (based on a £4.50 roll of film).  I’m planning on using Velvia 50 next, but as that will have to go away for developing the price starts to tip over £2 a shot!

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Old Car and Barn f/158 at 45sec on Ilford FP4

I do like shooting at 6 x 12 on my pin hole camera, but I’m not sure if it pleases me completely (if that makes sense).  The edges are heavily vignetted and there is the slight effect of moving at speed (look above at the tree on the left hand side), albeit it was slightly windy when I took all of my first shots, and given the length of time for the exposures perhaps this is to be expected – time will tell.

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Old Car and Barn II f/158 at 45sec on Ilford FP4

The vignetting can be addressed in part, as I have tried in Adobe Lightroom.  Film gives a lot of latitude and there is still detail in the shadows on most negatives that come out.  Detail, unless you are bracketing, that a digital camera would never show I feel.

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Towards Heyope – f/158 at 40 seconds (ish) on Ilford FP4

A slightly fixed up image, with a graduated Adobe Lightroom filter following the edge of hill, to darken the skies and the grass that appeared at first to be completely burnt out.  This was a challenging shot, as I was sat in shade (actually sat on the edge of a wood), shooting across to fields that clouds were passing over, breaking up the bright sunlight.

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Down Hill Through the Woods – f/158 at 1min 40 seconds (ish) on Ilford FP4

What I like about using the pinhole is that it is a thoroughly unrushed affair.  No quick grab shots here, though the thought of trying some street photography with it intrigues me (I believe there was a pin hole workshop as part of the London Streetphotography Festival).  You have to sit down, compose the shot without a view finder (albeit the Zero Image camera does come with a see through bit of plastic – which is handy to start off with), work out the exposure (no in camera metering here, so its out with the old light meter), then decide depending on your film whether recipority rules apply or not (and if they do, it could push your exposure out by two, five or even twelve times the original exposure). Once you’ve worked this all out, then maybe you can slide back the shutter.  This gives you time (between checking your watch) to actually take the view in for yourself, instead of chimping at your histogram and blasting off a couple of other shots “Just in case”.  After a couple of minutes, you can think about closing the shutter and winding the film on.  Oh and don’t forget to keep your tripod steady, the images are soft enough without any more help.

 

A Long Weekend in the Lakes Part 2

The first half of this article was one of my first blog posts on this site.  Even in that short while I’ve been on a bit of journey.  I’ve got back in to 35mm film photography and I think I have shot more on my Hasselblad Xpan in the past 7 months than I have in the previous 5 years of owning it.  Now I have come full circle (almost) and I am developing my own films.  As I type I am eyeing up the 4 canisters of Ilford HP5 and FP4 that need developing (I’ve also got a further 10 rolls of each on order – in case I run out icon smile A Long Weekend in the Lakes Part 2 )

As mentioned previously I had planned to go to the Lake District earlier in the year to do Skiddaw but that fell through.  Part of the plan was also to do an over night bivvy at Castlerigg, but as I say that all fell through.  The opportunity came up again when I booked up on a photography workshop with Dave Butcher in the Lakes.  The course was based in Eskdale at the Stanley House.  So having spent a night at Castlerigg Stone Circle and getting as far as Ashness Bridge, I was a little bit tired.  So I drove to Stanley House in Eskdale to get some sleep.

The course started at 2000hrs in the lounge of Stanley House, a very comfortable B&B. There we met Dave Butcher and his wife Jan.  Dave’s background was that of being a chemist for Ilford (so he does know a wee bit about the technology behind the print as well as making a picture too).  Dave took us through his own work and out lined the course.  If you haven’t already twigged, Dave is a black and white photographer specialising in landscapes, so there was none of this “Golden Hour” business to capture the light, as black and white requires light and contrast and subtlety doesn’t really work for black and white (in landscape at least).  Breakfast on Friday at 0800 and then out on the road at 0900hrs – very civilised!

The problem we had was the general abundance of moisture in the air, quite a lot of it in fact.  Dave took us to Wast Water, unfortunately the wind was blowing right down the lake in to us, so (and I wish I had a photograph of us) we were all huddled over our cameras trying to protect them, with umbrellas pulled down tight to provide top cover.  To say I nearly had a sense of humour failure would be understating it icon smile A Long Weekend in the Lakes Part 2 .

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I’d actually gave up on using my Canon 40D, and reverted to taking handheld shots on my Xpan using 400ISO film and a low f stop.

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Luckily Dave had a plan, it was called the pub for an early lunch.  So after a number of pints of pub brewed beer (and lunch), the weather cleared and we ventured out again.  This time up to Wasdale Head.  Dave took us up a beck for a bit of shooting waterfalls.

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Beck near Wasdale Head, Lake District (Xpan shot)

The sheep on the way back down were quite interesting not the usually skitterish sort that I usually encounter – they were quite cute and had this air of moral superiority about them.

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After a day successfully recovered we went to the Woolpack Inn in Eskdale for a pint or two and an evening meal.  That night the Woolpack was serving lobster and chips for £10 (result!).  After all that fresh air I think I was in my bed by 2100hrs!  As I had no doubt Saturday would be full on.

62/365 – Farm near Winnats Pass, Derbyshire Peak District from the A6187

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Farm near Winnats Pass, Derbyshire Peak District from the A6187 (62/365)

If its Thursday its Cheadle, and that means the Winnats Pass, near Castleton in the Derbyshire Peak District.  The day started off a bit grey and unpromising, but by the time I got on to the top of the Winnats Pass it was quite spring like.

There is so much crap on my sensor just now that I spent more time cleaning up this shot than taking it, which is not right.  So before I go on my holidays, the 40D is off for a spa treatment and the 20D will act as understudy.

55/365 – Near Higger Tor, Peak District

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Near Higger Tor, Peak District (55/365)

Spring is definitely in the air!  Drove back from my Cheadle meeting today with the top down, lovely warm and sunny. The air has the little hint of spring that one needs to know that summer is on the way and winter is behind us once again.

I thought I was taking good shots today (albeit it DML), then I looked at them when I got home and they were somewhat lacking.  They were certainly enhanced by the crud on my sensor and the recently added smears that are there if you up the contrast.  The smears were added after an attempt to clean my sensor.

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Lens Crud

I’ve upped the contrast so that the crud is more visible (and the smears).

So is this  the reason I’ve been looking for to get a new camera…or have you got any options that doesn’t involve spending high three figures and getting in to trouble from the missus?

Updating the website some more…

Just quickly updated my landscape gallery – I thought it was getting a bit over crowed, but I think I may have added more than I removed…heigh ho!

44/365 – Grasmere

Not one photograph but three for today..all gratuitous Lake District shots… icon smile 44/365   Grasmere

Not sure if any of them are of particular merit, but they are my triple whammy 365 offering.

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Wyke Waterfall, Grasmere, The Lake District (44/365)

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Grasmere Fence, Grasmere, The Lake District (44/365)

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Grasmere Boat House and Swan, Grasmere, The Lake District (44/365)

365 Project, err maybe call it 361 Project now….

Great idea…

..but all of mine are icon smile 365 Project, err maybe call it 361 Project now…. , or at least they were in the last days of December 2010.  I thought I would do a 365 Project, where you take a new picture every day for a year.  I thought I had made things easy for my self by not picking a specialist subject.  But you know what?  Its a bit hard.

…but…

I did well, or so I thought, for the first week.  Then you have to go back to work (I know, bummer…) and with the limited time left in the day after work you try your best as ever to discharge your family duties.  Where does your hand crafted photo of the day come in all this?  Well, for me this week it really hasn’t.

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Millhouses Park Sheffield (1/365)

The rot set in over a week ago though, pressed for time, I literally dusted off an old 35mm negative taken on Kodak Tri-X; scanned it in, cleaned it up and popped it on Flickr – my job was done, a tick in the box (or calendar).  My 365 Project integrity had taken a bash.

Then I made the mistake of taking 30mins out at the weekend to do a “quick” studio still life.  Well 30mins became 90mins…and my mum was here too, so I wasn’t looking after her.   I got a bit of grief…the photograph I made was good though!

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A Drink and a Smoke (15/365)

…now what…

Well after that and the angst I caused, the home studio set up went out the window.  My enthusiasm waned.  The next day, it was an artsy mobile phone picture, well it was a picture I guess!  Monday I did nothing.  Tuesday, I photographed what was left of my cooked breakfast (called it “Remains of the Day” – getit?) on my phone, Wednesday I did nothing.  Thursday – I took a picture.  Friday…its not looking good.

…any thoughts?

Doing a 365 Project was meant to (for me at least)…

  • Challenge me, by getting me out of the comfort zone of DML  (Doing Mostly Landscapes)
  • Help Me Get better at things
  • Make me think more about my photography

And it did!

For the first week.

Now is it a chore?

I feel guilty for not doing it.

In fact I feel pretty bad about not doing it, but is it causing me more trouble than it is worth?  Are the high minded (ambitious?) goals of getting better and being moved out of my comfort zone worth the grief?  Maybe, but may be not.

A New Hope

Perhaps I just need to re-evaluate what is a 365 project?  Is it a well taken photography every day?  Well perhaps I should strive for that idyll.  But, and it is a big but, perhaps I should just take pictures, pictures of the mundane (like my breakfast) right the way through the spectrum to the grand panoramic landscapes and the well lit studio shots.  I shouldn’t care whether that picture is taken on my XPAN, my Canon SLR, my Canon Powershot or indeed my mobile phone.  What SHOULD matter is that I am taking my picture, my way.  It’s not going to be a master piece every day, it might not get comments on Flickr (and hopefully never one of those stupid HTML badges).  However it will be a photograph a day and its the way I’m going to roll.

Welcome to my 361 Project.

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Stacked Stones, Padley Gorge, Derbyshire Peak District (2/365)