john mcauliffe
Member
Hi, the early years of photography were years of exploration not only where the photographer went but also how the photographer used the camera with the 'esoteric' artistic skills that seem to be lost in the modern day world of hast & rush. Many of the early photographers were artists who used the camera as an extenson their paint & brushes ,the large photo plates an extention of their canvases, the use of early flash exposure no exception, the flash-pan being the order of the day. Take a look at facial expressions that the cameras capture the moment after the flash-powder has gone off in the pan, that short time, when they see their whole life go in front of them, that is the image that makes the photo. I would like to take two photos of the 'Wedding Group' some time if opportunity ever arises, one the ordinary every day run of the mill, often dull, wedding photo, and one with a flash-pan that maybe gives off a little extra smoke to capture that special moment when they see their lives go in front of them.That's the photo that has the depth of the Masterpieces that hang in the National Art Galleries of the world, whilst the every day one being not far short of flat emptiness. Don't dismiss the early methods that the pioneers of photography used, the more one learns of them the more there is to learn, of the lost arts. Skills of the past that are gone like a flash in the pan. John