I'm sure 30-40 pounds is more like. I think his custom built 14x20 was built by the late Jack Deardorff. I'm not exactly sure though so don't hold me to it. My previous post was just a feeble attempt at a little humor. I've been shooting ULF for a few years now so I'm pretty up on the logistics involved with using one in the field. Of course a 300 lb camera sounds so much more dramatic in the review. Maybe the author was weighing the camera and the Yak that was carrying it.
Thanks Robert,
You reminded me of reading the following, and I thought others would enjoy.
In the late 1970s, Kenro Izu obtained a New York State Arts Grant. Later, at the penultimate moment before such grants totally ended, he won a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts to make large-format photographs. Strangely though Izus own country of Japan refused to support photographic artists with grants in aid or exhibition programs, the United States and the National Endowment for the Arts gave Izu financial support, even though he is a foreign national.
The endowment awarded Izu $16,000 to develop his project. In turn, Izu contacted Jack Deardorff, placing an order with perhaps the greatest camera maker in the United States for the largest format camera that I can carry by myself ...a modification of Mr. Deardorffs 12x20 banquet camera
with hardware the same as Mr. Deardorffs banquet camera
the same ideal aspect ratio as a 35mm camera, or a 5x7. The camera was Jack Deardorffs masterpiece of a lifetime of making cameras. It was a monster camera that created 14x20 negatives. It was a behemoth. There was nothing else like it. The perfect size but perhaps a little too large, Izu admitted later, in a fit of modesty given his slight frame.
Quoted from:
Sacred Places, Kenro Izu, Essay by Clark Worswick, Arena Editions, Page 10
A couple years back the Columbus Ohio Museum of Art had an Art Sinsabaugh exhibit which included the 12x20 Deardorff and tripod Art used. If I hadnt seen pictures of Art carrying camera and tripod on his shoulder I might have said the 300 pound estimate looked pretty close to true.
Odd that 14x20 seems middling in all our posts of 20x24 today.
John Powers