bjorke
Member
That is, expose for the highlights in B&W and let the shadows work themselves out, so that you can leave the negs in the developer for an indefinite time and never worry about overdevelopment short of base fog?
bjorke said:That is, expose for the highlights in B&W and let the shadows work themselves out, so that you can leave the negs in the developer for an indefinite time and never worry about overdevelopment short of base fog?
I had not seen this one before: http://unblinkingeye.com/Articles/Mortensen/mortensen.html based on a later Mortensen book than mine ("Projection Control" from the 30's)garryl said:You have checked out the article on Unblinkingeye.com...
david b said:Wasn't Mortenson the arch-nemesis of the f64 group?
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That is one of the two best sources for an explaination of his exposure system. I've noticed that the whole secret is the fact that rearly does he go over a lighting ratio of 4:1. He take a flat subject and expands the mid tonesmfobrien said:This post got me looking on my bookshelves. I have the first edition, 6th printing of Pictorial Lighting by Mortensen. A very neat book.
Either way, they were Alma-Tad and Leighton junkiesgarryl said:quick correction- it was Cecil B. DeMille , not D.W. Griffith.
I'm pretty sure it's: "Seeing straight : the f.64 revolution in photography" published as a show catalog by the Oakland Museum, 1992. Editor Therese Thau Heyman, Fwd by Beaumont Newhall. Been a couple of years since I looked at it, but I'm fairly certain that's the one.garryl said:Please, which book is this- curious minds want to knowme said:...if you get the big "f/64" book...
bjorke said:(and hence we don't see Mortenson in German photomags and their American children like LIFE and LOOK...
mark said:I am not sure I understand. Can someone explain the technique to me, or point me to a place where I can read about it on the net.
I meant of the Stefan Lorant school (Munchner Illustrierte Presse etc). LIFE, BTW, showed up in 1936 and is decidedly non-pictorialist from the cover forward.Ole said:But the issues of Der Satrap I have in my collection (1934) are full of pictorialism...
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