Juan Valdenebro
Member
Hi to all PHOTRIO members.
In this 2019 I decided to read, in chronological order, the whole of the two sub-forums I’ve been reading for some years: B&W and Enlarging… Lots of information from the early 2000’s to present days... It was really interesting.
It’s a wonderful dose of real love reading such precise spirits sharing so much effort and dedication… What a joy learning from Sandy King, Les McLean, Ralph Lambrecht, Patrick Gainer, Tom Hoskinson, DF Cardwell, Richard Wasserman, Steve Sherman, Bob Carnie, Drew Wiley… My deepest gratitude to all of them and to many more here who live deep down into this unforgettable and magical world of photography where we don’t stop learning and experimenting …
2006 was by the way a year with great posting about reduced agitation and all it can offer…
I´d like to start a thread with the title “Overcast/Soft light, 35mm handheld” for several reasons…
The most important one, might be there are lots of valid information in so many threads, but that information, although being absolutely true for every poster’s work and experience, just can’t remain equally valid if we talk about different formats or if we talk about tripod use or not, or even if we talk about controlling wild contrast or not… Many things “depend”, and are clearly true and clearly false at the same time if we’re not specific enough…
The second most important reason for this thread is, the majority of photographs seem to be done, all around the world, with small cameras, without tripod, and avoiding direct sunlight…
I use my Hasselblad and my Arca Swiss 4x5 both with tripod, and shoot under harsh sunlight ocassionally, but for 33 years, back then and right now, possibly more than 90% of the photographs I´ve done and do and will do for pleasure are done with my 35mm rangefinders in the street, or indoors (family and friends) without tripod and away from direct sun…
So I thought it would be fine for all of us now, and for future readers too, having a thread for sharing technical and aesthetic comments, and images too, all related to the most common way of analog photography in the world… I think when Oskar Barnack tried a few film formats before creating his first camera, he went visually for that now common format because above it depth of field decreases quickly, and below it image quality drops noticeably when the negative is enlarged…
Thanks everyone!
In this 2019 I decided to read, in chronological order, the whole of the two sub-forums I’ve been reading for some years: B&W and Enlarging… Lots of information from the early 2000’s to present days... It was really interesting.
It’s a wonderful dose of real love reading such precise spirits sharing so much effort and dedication… What a joy learning from Sandy King, Les McLean, Ralph Lambrecht, Patrick Gainer, Tom Hoskinson, DF Cardwell, Richard Wasserman, Steve Sherman, Bob Carnie, Drew Wiley… My deepest gratitude to all of them and to many more here who live deep down into this unforgettable and magical world of photography where we don’t stop learning and experimenting …
2006 was by the way a year with great posting about reduced agitation and all it can offer…
I´d like to start a thread with the title “Overcast/Soft light, 35mm handheld” for several reasons…
The most important one, might be there are lots of valid information in so many threads, but that information, although being absolutely true for every poster’s work and experience, just can’t remain equally valid if we talk about different formats or if we talk about tripod use or not, or even if we talk about controlling wild contrast or not… Many things “depend”, and are clearly true and clearly false at the same time if we’re not specific enough…
The second most important reason for this thread is, the majority of photographs seem to be done, all around the world, with small cameras, without tripod, and avoiding direct sunlight…
I use my Hasselblad and my Arca Swiss 4x5 both with tripod, and shoot under harsh sunlight ocassionally, but for 33 years, back then and right now, possibly more than 90% of the photographs I´ve done and do and will do for pleasure are done with my 35mm rangefinders in the street, or indoors (family and friends) without tripod and away from direct sun…
So I thought it would be fine for all of us now, and for future readers too, having a thread for sharing technical and aesthetic comments, and images too, all related to the most common way of analog photography in the world… I think when Oskar Barnack tried a few film formats before creating his first camera, he went visually for that now common format because above it depth of field decreases quickly, and below it image quality drops noticeably when the negative is enlarged…
Thanks everyone!
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