Paul Howell
Subscriber
As an addendum, developing the negative/postiive side, I got this from AI :
are there photographers famous for shooting color negative film?
- William Eggleston: Eggleston primarily used color negative films like Kodak Vericolor and later Portra for his prints. His work, such as the vivid, everyday scenes in William Eggleston’s Guide, showcases the muted yet rich palette of color negative film, which was key to his pioneering color photography.
- Stephen Shore: Shore extensively used color negative films like Kodak Vericolor and Fujifilm stocks for his Uncommon Places series. The film’s dynamic range and subtle color shifts helped him capture the American landscape with a documentary-like clarity and warmth.
- Joel Meyerowitz: Meyerowitz often worked with color negative films such as Kodak Ektacolor (not to be confused with Ektachrome) for his street photography and Cape Light series. These films allowed for the soft, natural tones that defined his exploration of light and color.
- Nan Goldin: Goldin’s raw, intimate images in The Ballad of Sexual Dependency were shot on color negative films like Kodak Portra and Fujicolor, which gave her work its characteristic grainy texture and saturated, emotional hues.
- Alec Soth: Known for his large-format work in projects like Sleeping by the Mississippi, Soth used color negative films (e.g., Kodak Portra 400) to achieve the lush, detailed tones that define his lyrical documentation of American life.
tell me for each of those photographers what was their camera of choice (this one I asked to annoy people who don't want brands mentioned) Eggleston's Canonet is da bomb...
So mostly no Nikon for negative film...uhhmmm
- William Eggleston:
- Camera: Leica M-series rangefinders (notably Leica M3 and M4) and Canonet G-III QL17.
- Stephen Shore:
- Camera: Rolleiflex 2.8F (medium format) and later a Deardorff 8x10 large-format camera.
- Joel Meyerowitz:
- Camera: Leica M-series rangefinders (primarily Leica M4) and Deardorff 8x10.
- Nan Goldin:
- Camera: Leica M-series (often Leica M6) and Nikon FM2.
- Alec Soth:
- Camera: Deardorff 8x10 and later a Mamiya 7 II (medium format).
The debate between slide vs. negative film has been going for a very long time. Slide film became the film of choice for commercial and magazine photographers due to how color work was printed for mass market. Nat Geo used slide film, in the 60s Ansco later Kodak. But for printing Kodak recommended negative film. In the 70s the Air Force moved from black and white to color portraiture of commanders and first sergeants we used negative film. With E6 we could have to make a mask to control the contrast. Then you had a 3rd generation print that would lose sharpness. First the slide, second the inter-negative with mask for the final print. When projecting it was a frist generation slide or a copy that had contrast controlled with a mask. Cibachrome improved the slide to print as there no need for a inter negative, but you still need a mask. As there are no direct postive color material such as Cibachrome and most labs scan either slides or negative film unless your are optically printing color not sure if make much of differance. If you want an optical print, then the only practical option is negative. film.