I'd like to find (or build), a chair with the headbrace piece that keeps the poser's head still during the focusing, film loading, and taking of a LF portrait. Any idea/advice on how I get this done?
Thanks,
Steve www.scdowellphoto.com
Thanks guys. I'd like to just rig something up honestly. Since this is not a profit making endeavor, I'd like to go the cheap way.
Who's Alphonse Bertillon, and what does his chair look like?
Steve www.scdowellphoto.com
Bertillon introduced anthropometry into the police force. Systematic photography made part of his system.
For photographing suspects etc. a rotatable chair with head rest was used and mechanically rotated in the sequens of photographing.
I still saw such a chair at a police department in the 80's.
I'd like to find (or build), a chair with the headbrace piece that keeps the poser's head still during the focusing, film loading, and taking of a LF portrait. Any idea/advice on how I get this done?
Thanks,
Steve www.scdowellphoto.com
The simplest gadget by far would be a rod with a soft pad on the end which reaches up to the back of the subject's head by some convenient route and against which the subject rests his/her head. Remember that, in contrast to the Daguerrotype days, you are not concerned to keep the subject immobilized for a long period, only to ensure that he/she does not move between focusing and making the exposure. This rod will ensure that front/back movement does not occur, a simple sight on the front of the camera can be used to make sure the subject does not drift to the left or right.
It shouldn't be too difficult to modify a lighting stand to take a large "u " shaped clip you could make to screw into the top of the stand as a brace to support the victims head, to re-create a poseing stand .