Photographers and analog users all, a question for you:
I'm in a desert environment, to be specific, in Saudi Arabia --I teach at a university on the Gulf coast. I have always preferred to shoot color, but want to work on my B&W.
My question has to do with choice of film that would work best here, and to make the question more comprehensible, I'd like to describe the environment, the better to acquaint you with the challenges of working with B&W here.
First is the blinding sunlight --it's exceptionally strong, overpoweringly so except in the winter months, when it is not "killer bright" but easily what in a more temperate clime would be full-strength; clouds are a rarity, and full cloud cover is almost never seen. The sun being as strong as it is, together with exceptionally sparse rainfall, means that even what green vegetation exists look exhausted --flat, faded, without luster, anemic, and dust-covered. Structures --homes and the like-- tend, with the exception of skyscrapers (that I have no desire to photograph anyway), to an exclusive reliance on concrete and masonry block for a building material. Paints tend to pastels and flat whites, and in both cases are rapidly washed out, bleached by the sun. Making matters somewhat worse, the terrain is basically flat sand, not of the type that people use to fill children's sand boxes, but a very fine, almost dust-like white powder --I suspect it's limestone (I don't know my geology)-- that if it has any hue to it at all verge ever so subtly towards a hint of cream, but only barely so. When it rains, which is very infrequently, wildflowers and grasses will appear in areas where the water table is high, but they die off very quickly, and in the main, expanses of open space are so entirely empty that, in the glare of any given day, it's just an expanse of perfect featureless white. Trying to shoot something a mile away in the distance makes for a foreground of practically nothing at all.
My experience has been frustrating, because the general absence of contrast in this environment coupled with the terrific, almost blinding whiteness of the terrain even on what here would pass for weak-sunlight days makes it hard to compose a decent black and white picture.
I'm shooting a Bronica Sq-ai, sometimes a Mamiya C33. Can anyone recommend a B&W film that would work best under these conditions? (And yes, I use a red 25 or a red 29)
I'd really appreciate a hand with this!
Thanks...
I'm in a desert environment, to be specific, in Saudi Arabia --I teach at a university on the Gulf coast. I have always preferred to shoot color, but want to work on my B&W.
My question has to do with choice of film that would work best here, and to make the question more comprehensible, I'd like to describe the environment, the better to acquaint you with the challenges of working with B&W here.
First is the blinding sunlight --it's exceptionally strong, overpoweringly so except in the winter months, when it is not "killer bright" but easily what in a more temperate clime would be full-strength; clouds are a rarity, and full cloud cover is almost never seen. The sun being as strong as it is, together with exceptionally sparse rainfall, means that even what green vegetation exists look exhausted --flat, faded, without luster, anemic, and dust-covered. Structures --homes and the like-- tend, with the exception of skyscrapers (that I have no desire to photograph anyway), to an exclusive reliance on concrete and masonry block for a building material. Paints tend to pastels and flat whites, and in both cases are rapidly washed out, bleached by the sun. Making matters somewhat worse, the terrain is basically flat sand, not of the type that people use to fill children's sand boxes, but a very fine, almost dust-like white powder --I suspect it's limestone (I don't know my geology)-- that if it has any hue to it at all verge ever so subtly towards a hint of cream, but only barely so. When it rains, which is very infrequently, wildflowers and grasses will appear in areas where the water table is high, but they die off very quickly, and in the main, expanses of open space are so entirely empty that, in the glare of any given day, it's just an expanse of perfect featureless white. Trying to shoot something a mile away in the distance makes for a foreground of practically nothing at all.
My experience has been frustrating, because the general absence of contrast in this environment coupled with the terrific, almost blinding whiteness of the terrain even on what here would pass for weak-sunlight days makes it hard to compose a decent black and white picture.
I'm shooting a Bronica Sq-ai, sometimes a Mamiya C33. Can anyone recommend a B&W film that would work best under these conditions? (And yes, I use a red 25 or a red 29)
I'd really appreciate a hand with this!
Thanks...
