I went to commercial art school (SVA) before I went to photography school (Portfolio Center, now Miami Ad School). I worked in advertising as a comp artist and graphic designer before I made the career change to commercial photography. I began my career shooting 4x5 transparencies for product photography and learned quite fast what the difference 1/3 of a stop can make with chromes. While you will not get a disagreement from me, I think a lot of people today shooting film for fine art tend to shoot black and white film, thus the discussion in this thread.
Today I look forward to retirement from commercial work in 2024, but until then I shoot ALPA technical cameras with digital backs in a studio environment. I find the medium format digital back is pretty close to shooting chromes, although with a larger dynamic range.
Best to you!
I know this will strike a lot of people the wrong way, but I always thought zonies were boring people who make pretty boring pictures. That includes Adams. They concentrate so hard on the "system" that they don't pay attention to the images. The system is a crutch they lean on to avoid walking.
I always ask people if they prefer Adams or Weston. That answer usually tells me all I need to know.
Patrick, Just wondering how much large fomat photography you've done?
Patrick, Just wondering how much large fomat photography you've done?
I misjudged the intent of the shorter message and would like to apologize for the misunderstanding, which was entirely on my end. Please carry on!I live in France — and have for more than 30 years. As you probably know, large format photography (especially landscapes and still life), historically, has never been as popular here as "people oriented" photography. Cartier-Bresson is king, here; Ansel Adams is largely unknown. Lie many on this forum, I studied with Ansel. He helped me understand the difference between the appreciation of the print as an object (the "Fine Print", whre the actual subject is secondary) vs photography whose content is its priority. Even here in France — a country where [I believe] the general level of art culture to be superior to that of my native U.S. — I've had to constantly explain that difference, and it has opened eyes. (usually this is easy once I mention that, when one sees a painting by Monet, they don't say, "Oh; a bowl of oranges. How boring"!) Therefore, I was curious to find out if Patrick — whose profile listed 35mm RF as his format — had formed his opinion from a "French" point of view.
Beaucoup.Patrick, Just wondering how much large fomat photography you've done?
I don't think I've posted before on this thread, and certainly don't have the time to read its several years of input. I've certainly my fair share of Wynn's prints, and also have a lovely book of his signed posthumously by his wife, who was also a photographer. Something to keep in perspective is that Wynn, to my knowledge, exclusively contact printed, and specifically on Azo, which has a very long scale quite forgiving of negative overexposure, especially with certain films of that era. Additionally, he tended to work mostly right there in the Monterey Area where the light is fairly predictable per season and location. In other words, he had a lot of experience with it.
Ansel had much different expectations and traveled a lot more, and primarily enlarged his images onto conventional graded papers. He also perceived the teaching value to the Zone System. I personally regard the ZS as just a rite of passage, now in the rear view mirror for me, but still find it valuable as a kind of common denominator lingo for many black and white photographers, especially of the sheet film variety.
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