Wow...Perfect.The image was made in April 1927 using a 6 1/2 x 8 1/2-inch view camera and exposed onto a glass plate.
The two versions of this image are discussed in detail in Chapter 3, ‘Monolith, the Face of Half Dome’ in Andrea G. Stillman’s book “Looking at Ansel Adams: The Photographs and the Man”. A book worth reading to have a more rounded understanding of the man.
Also, if you scroll down on this page
https://northrup.photo/podcast/picture-this-photography-podcast-ep-5-ansel-adams/
you can see a direct comparison between the yellow filter version and the red filter version.
Bests,
David.
www.dsallen.de
There is a large mural of Half Dome in the entrance hall of his home;it doesn't have a black sky.so, I assume it's from number 11.Not sue how many frames of Half Dome he shot. I am talking about the "Iconic" picture from when he was quite young. I believe it was pre 1930.?
Anyway..... i have heard he had 12 frames available. By the time he got up high, he had two left. Number-11 he shot with a yellow filter and Number-12 he shot with a dark red filter.....where the sky is almost black.
Anybody know...did he ever print Number-11.?
I have done a search, but i do not find anything.....though i will be the first to admit i am not a computer person or a good researcher.
Are there photos, On The Internet, of Number-11.?
Thank You
Very Well Said.....Thank YouCMoore - Many of AA's most popular images were a bit on the theatrical side. But there are many more which are highly nuanced, including certain shots of Half Dome itself. There are six such "gentle sky" images of Half Dome in my favorite book of his, Range of Light, plus the two "black sky" images already discussed. I've never met him. The only point of contact we had, so to speak, was a major retrospective where my big color prints alternated between every one of his big
"mural-sized" (mostly 40X60 inch) black and white prints. Same High Sierra geography, and both large format, but very very different styles. In that case, he actually printed some of his famous dramatic "black sky" images rather soft and poetic - or technically had them printed under his direct supervision by a big lab suitably equipped. It was a logistical default to the fact that the old-style cameras, lenses, and film he had once used simply wouldn't stand up to high magnification at high
contrast without looking odd. That's probably why, in his how-to books, he even recommends printing big sizes relatively soft and warm. So a completely different look from the same man, and rather effective too. People backed off to view his prints, and nosed up to study mine (Cibachrome can carry a lot of detail, even in gentle images). Perhaps his whole doctrine of previsualization should be put into realistic context - he certainly fiddled around a lot in the darkroom afterwards; so
even to him, previsualization was probably just one potential tool among many. When I'm hiking with someone and they see me using a red filter, I simply hand them a pair of red laser glasses and ask them to look at the scene. But I don't recall ever taking a shot that produced a black sky, or maybe once at the very beginning. A bit over the top for me.
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