djdister
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It's comforting to know that even sometimes, Ansel had to wing it...
It's comforting to know that even sometimes, Ansel had to wing it...
If you consider the meter calibration equation View attachment 408876 for Sunny 16 without factoring in K, you get View attachment 408877 or View attachment 408878 cd/ft2.
I don't know if that applies to the Luminance of the Moon or not.
Hope does Adams in the article stating that the luminance of the moon—250 c/ft2 relate to the Sunny 16 rule, if it does?
It's comforting to know that even sometimes, Ansel had to wing it...
I'm sure he wasn't atop his car when that Moonrise shot transpired. And car roofs can be wobbly, even when a plywood platform is installed up there, like with Ansel's Plymouth "woodie" station wagon. Maybe he never was a photographer, but a surfer - they sure liked those wood-sided station wagons back in Beach Boys days. You just never know out in the desert. It can rain. I remember driving to Death Valley with inflated inner tubes tied to the top of the station wagon when I was 16. Badwater was filled with a shallow salt lake over 30 miles long. That has happened three times in my lifetime; in the last instance, people brought kayaks. What Ansel was probably doing was scoping out the real estate in rural New Mexico, plotting to buy it cheap, and then develop it as beachfront surfing property once the next deluge arrived. And he did it by moonlight, so nobody would notice him sneaking around.
Here zoomed in on.. f/32No way that was shot based on an f/11 analogy, if even his 8x10 lens would open that wide. More like f/64 for sake of depth of field, even factoring front tilt. I'd agree that experienced intuition probably had a lot more to do with it than some mental formula recall. He shot scenes with the moon in it rather frequently. But a bit of apocryphal lore is always fun when telling, and re-telling, and re-re-telling such stories.
I'm sure he wasn't atop his car when that Moonrise shot transpired....
He didn’t want to blow out the moon and he hoped there would be enough light to see something in the foreground. A few sparkles of sunlight off the crosses made it a meaningful image for the faithful.
According to his darkroom notes he winged it a lot more than meets the eye, nor most anyone would want to admit. He proved beyond doubt the beauty of consistency is in inconsistency. Once that is clear, sky is the limit.
It was made after sundown, there was a twilight glow on the distant peaks and clouds. The average light values of the foreground were placed on the "U" of the Weston Master meter; apparently the values of the moon and distant peaks did not lie higher than the "A" of the meter .
A cute true story about Ansel Adams Moonrise over Hernandez Pictures at AIPAD.
A few years back, I attended the Association of International Photography Art Dealers [AIPAD], as it's more commonly known, held at the Park Avenue Armory in NYC. There were lots of Ansel Adams B/W prints. Many dealers from around the world were there selling his stuff. I saw three different Sunrise over Hernandez prints. One dealer had his at around $80,000; another at $115,000, and the last at around $140,000.
So I'm standing by the last dealer, the one with the $140,000 edition, when in flows this attention-grabbing couple. He, a rather ordinary fifty-something-year-old but dressed to kill, and she, a knockout blonde about half his age. So I overhear him telling her, "This is nothing. My Hernandez cost me $180,000." As they drifted away, he had a smile on his face. And she, well, I think she was impressed. I was. But not about the $180,000. Or that he had an Adams Hernandez. I was impressed that he had such a hot young girlfriend. Why else would anyone spend $180,000 on an Adams? Even the dealer selling his Hernandez seemed impressed as he winked at me in acknowledgement.
I saw three different Sunrise over Hernandez prints.
If they were titled "Sunrise over Hernandez", I would have checked the provenance.![]()
Yes Adams photograph the tittle is only Moonrise. They may put Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico but never Moonrise over Hernandez.
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