Fenêtre...

Fenêtre...

"Fenêtre de ma cuisine..."
(Window of my kitchen...)

Every sunny morning about twenty minutes after sunrise, the light comes through my kitchen window in the most wonderful way. A few times I've made it a point to be cooking breakfast at that time, just so I could be there, watching the light changing as the sun moved behind the bushes and trees outside, throwing patterns on the dirty window glass I never clean because it lights up in such a lovely way in the morning light.

I work in large format and have gotten very used to the original concept of the camera itself being not much more than a little dark box with film on one side and a lens on the other.

It's the lens that actually creates the image. After using early soft focus lenses with deliberately-induced spherical aberration, I've begun making my own lenses, put together by hand from other disassembled lenses, diopters, doublets, achromatic cells, magnifying glasses, old binoculars...

Factory lenses strive for perfection, perfect resolution and contrast and color saturation without flare or coma or any sort of optical aberration. Perfect lenses, like perfect people, no flaws, no surprises, no personality. Stepford lenses...

But with lenses, as with people, it's the flaws that can be beautiful when you accept them and get to know them. I think this is why some people are being drawn to Holgas and Lens-Babies and the like. Beauty in the imperfection.

"Fenêtre de ma cuisine..." was done with a home-made 12" lens that allowed more chromatic abberation than even an old soft-focus lens would give, so I could shut it down in aperture a bit and still have a beautiful mess. Beautiful to me, anyways... Just two elements, a half-meter's focal length in front, a meter's at the rear, spaced a little too close. It just can't get all the different colors focused in the right place, but stop it down a bit and it tries. It doesn't quite succeed, but it fails so wonderfully. And the spread of the color focus speads the depth of field just so slightly, that while there's a fuzz, there's a faint underlying sharpness too. But it's the softness and the play of the light I love.

I have other 12" lenses that would have captured this with so much more detail, but missed the real impression of the moment. When I remember a certain someone's face, I don't remember the detail of her skin pores or her individual eyebrow hairs. I remember the glow of her skin, the the softness of the sparkle in her eyes, the outpouring of joy when she smiled. Not the physical details a camera could capture. The more important things.

I have high school students who, after two or three years in photography think they know it all. After thirty-some years in large format, I feel like I've barely scratched the surface...
Location
Home
Equipment Used
Kodak 2D, 300mm IWSWG
Exposure
The blink of an eye...
Film & Developer
HP5, HC110
Paper & Developer
Ilford MGIV FB
Lens Filter
None
"watching the light changing as the sun moved behind the bushes and trees outside, throwing patterns on the dirty window glass I never clean because it lights up in such a lovely way in the morning light"-Mark Sawyer

You write of a very esence of photogrqphy/life/the jorney

This image is a visual poetry

Thank you

ILYA
 
I don't know French, but I don't have to to appreciate the beauty of this photograph as well as the skill and craft behind it.

Personality is a concept that has become more and more important to me. I agree. I was given a very nice Mamiya medium format camera on my birthday last year. I've used it twice, whereas I use my old Crown Graphic and Holga cameras way more often. Granted, you're at a different level than me, manufacturing your own equipment, but the principle is the same.

Good riddance. Your work posted here is amazing. Thanks for sharing it!

- Thom
 
Thank you everyone for the kind comments. They mean a lot as the images I've been doing mean a lot to me.

Mcquak~ Yes it was toned, rather oddly. It's a sulfiding (ie, stinky) sepia toner used way past exhaustion and replenished, several times. I honestly don't know what changes, but something changes. It's also coffee-stained afterwards. I'm usually satisfied with a "conventional" split-toned sulfiding sepia, but this one needed something different. The scan is actually fairly faithful to the color of the print...

No one should be too impressed by my lens-building capabilities; if I really knew what I was doing, they'd probably give me much more "normal" images.
 
Nice picture you made.
The color goes well and nice to the mode and the story behind it.
 
sometimes the things we take for granted
that somehow cross the border from mundane to something else ..

beautiful imagery (visual and written )

thanks!

john
 
One of my favorite photographs ever posted on this web site. So glad to see this again.
- Thomas
 

Media information

Album
Member Album by Mark Sawyer
Added by
Mark Sawyer
Date added
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1,125
Comment count
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Image metadata

Filename
apug_fenetre.jpg
File size
63.7 KB
Date taken
Sun, 11 March 2007 11:51 PM
Dimensions
392px x 500px

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