Isn't that Lomography? I've watched the term - and the business - grow over the years and I still can't get my head around it. As far as I can see, it's using cameras and film that were at the bottom end of technology half a century ago. Not saying that some artistic photographs didn't come out of those old Brownie's, but probably more by accident than planning. Maybe this is another "anti-perfection," retro movement like vinyl records and tube amps.
I'm very open to someone telling me what I'm getting wrong.
paul
i have spent the last jeeez since 1996 ( even before that since i used a hawkeye flashfun as a kid ) working with old brownies, cyclones, delmars, sureshots &c
and it is more than "luck" or "accident" getting images out of those cameras. it isn't anti perfection, but what one person thinks is good, bad or mediocre
another person might think is perfectly wonderful its all about taste ... not only does it takes an awful lot of skill and knowledge to know the limitations
of one's equimpent ( lo fi camera ) and to know what to do after one depresses the shutter. and i think that dovetails right into what matt said previous to this ...
that it is OK to take mediocre photographs &c ... what is "mediocre" to one person might not be middle of the road boring, trite, blaaah to the next because
everyone using a camera is at a different skill level, whether it is skill in composition, exposure, development interpretation/printing. i can't tell you how many photographs
i made 30 years ago that i edited out and didn't print, that i have looked at since then in the last 3 or 5 years and with distance, a new eye, more skill in composition and understanding
how to print/interpret the negatives the overlooked images have become the best images on the roll ... i passed over them thinking they weren't good, they were mediocre ...
besides what is mediocre to ME might be crap to you, or off the charts great to someone else. as said before, its a matter of taste.
i don't like kittens with a ball of yarn, but you might have 400 photographs you have taken in the last 50 years of kittens with balls of yarn and love them...