• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Looking back at old negatives

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
201,903
Messages
2,831,924
Members
101,014
Latest member
photomaximo
Recent bookmarks
0

cliveh

Subscriber
Allowing Ads
Joined
Oct 9, 2010
Messages
7,804
Format
35mm RF
Do you sometimes look at old negatives and see some qualities in them that you did not notice when you first viewed them? I sometimes do and am surprised I didn’t bother to print them at the time. Perhaps an historic viewpoint is quite different from looking at an image with a fresh viewpoint.
 

mr rusty

Member
Joined
Sep 7, 2009
Messages
827
Location
lancashire,
Format
Medium Format
Isn't this part of the fun. I rarely print more than 4-6 from each film which leaves plenty of discoveries and challenges for another day.
 

Gerald C Koch

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jul 12, 2010
Messages
8,131
Location
Southern USA
Format
Multi Format
Yes I do and experienced a creepy experience. I was looking at an old proof sheet with an otherwise unremarkable image of an old, derelict church. On close inspection a ghostly face was watching me from a church window. The church was in the middle of nowhere so, a revenant, a vagrant, what? I totally missed this when I took the photo. So an unremarkable picture became a remarkable one.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

snapguy

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jan 1, 2014
Messages
1,287
Location
California d
Format
35mm
dinosaurs

When I was a nipper -- about 1947 -- I took a great photo of a steam locomotive puffing out black smoke and looking like it was going 90 mph. The camera was a lowly Brownie Reflex (127 film) and the engine was, in fact, going quite slow trying to get up speed. These days those steam engines are dinosaurs and the photo looks better than ever.
 

WetMogwai

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Oct 29, 2009
Messages
152
Format
Multi Format
One of the first portraits I took with 4x5 didn't impress me when I first looked at the negative. I didn't bother printing it. Later, I learned Pt/Pd printing. I came back to this negative because it had good contrast and ended up printing what became one of my favorites.
 

Ian Grant

Subscriber
Allowing Ads
Joined
Aug 2, 2004
Messages
23,409
Location
West Midland
Format
Multi Format
I'm going back through negatives from about 1986 onwards, that was when my photography changed direction very significantly. (Essentially I switched from more commercial work to personal projects).

For about 8 years I had a burst of extreme productivity shooting mostly large format but also a lot of 35mm images alongside. I had so many projects on the go and really only finished and exhibited 2 from that period. Now looking back as I'm digitising negatives for probable publication I'm finding many images I've never printed, they didn't fit with the overall concept or I didn't feel they were strong enough at the time.

Some negatives while never printed I mentally catalogued at the shooting stage for possible inclusion in future projects, now these are slowly coming together as I scour through my negative files and I', building up an idea of which to print in the darkroom. I'm usually doing negative scans as well for a number of reasons, cataloguing, online/web use, possible publication. I prefer a negative scan to scanning a Fibre based print the alternative is to make Glossy Resin Coated prints & scan them to achieve similar quality.

When I look at the 35mm negatives things are quite different as I have made very few prints from them, I've only included 2 prints from 35mm negatives in exhibition sets. I will be re-evaluating these separately with a view to producing a more documentary exhibition set of smaller prints.

Ian
 

Ghostman

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Dec 5, 2011
Messages
504
Location
Switzerland
Format
Multi Format
I find that I need a lot a distance and time between taking a picture and printing it. I recently moved and had not developed any film in nearly a year. I had a mountain of them to process and I had completely forgotten what was on them. That time between taking and processing was equally valuable as my mind's eye had already forgotten, so when I saw the negative, the moment came back to me as a new one.

Then there's going over old negatives with a new and improved (hopefully) eye, idea, style and level of skill.

Distance in time is good.
 

RalphLambrecht

Subscriber
Allowing Ads
Joined
Sep 19, 2003
Messages
14,937
Location
K,Germany
Format
Medium Format
Isn't this part of the fun. I rarely print more than 4-6 from each film which leaves plenty of discoveries and challenges for another day.

maybe you shoot too much.don't shoot it unless you are willing to print it too.:wink:
 

MartinP

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jun 23, 2007
Messages
1,569
Location
Netherlands
Format
Medium Format
I often look back over older negs to pick out something for a 'surprise' print. It seems that frequently I'll shoot several versions of almost-the-same shot (higher, lower, left, right, with/without some movement, changed depth-of-field etc. etc.) and sometimes I change my mind about the most appropriate one. Then there are the ones that didn't go 'well', such as the baby screaming and kicking after the first quiet shot for example, which became more meaningful years later when making a complete set of childhood-emotion pictures for the childs 18th. birthday. Time changes everything.
 

OptiKen

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Oct 31, 2013
Messages
1,055
Location
Orange County
Format
Medium Format
I think when I am developing a fresh roll of film, I'm inclined to view the images with an eye for what I saw when I took them.
When I revisit negatives later, I am looking at them with no expectations so I'm more open to what the capture shows rather than what I wanted to find originally
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom