The EveryThingCam (ETC) Progresses

24 September 2010
Tonight I made quad-mode aperture with a cheap old Kodak shutter and mounted it on a lensboard I finished. “Quad” because the shutter had a manually turned four-aperture dial for four stops. I removed the lens elements and used the four apertures for four differently-sized pinholes optimized for four different fpcal lengths: 3.5″, 6″, 9″, and 11″ (shown here). As a 4×5 sheet film/paper quad-length pinhole the ETC is ready. Still has a bit to go for the 120 rollfilm back and as a lens camera. Slowly but surely….

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An Explanation

19 September 2010

Wow! I’m actually directly adding a new goyapost (rather than via posterous). I intended to do the ritual “Back to Teaching” post a few weeks ago when I went off of sabbatical the back to the daily grind. The teaching side of it has been smooth enough; it’s all the impending administrative crap that I’m dreading and already feel the weight of bearing down. Several review committees, a search, and now I’m doing the Asian Studies website because I thought it was so lame (if you want something done right…). AND, next week I have to go sit on a friggin’ Grand Jury selection. I swear, if I’m chosen it’ll royally screw up my teaching. I don’t even believe in the jury system so on that basis alone I should be excused.

In any case, an explanation for the lack of goyablogging. The short version: I have a new hobby (gee, guess what it is?). Between fixing/modding/building cameras and shooting/developing/printing film I barely have time to sleep and eat. Now that I’m back to teaching it’s even worse: very little play time. I have about five parallel photo projects going on top of the occasional shot and film processing. I acquired an old but good 35mm to 4×5 enlarger and some enlarging lenses and desire to practice darkroom printing (in the makeshift darkroom), which requires much patience and trial-and-error. I very much enjoy the variety of formats and films and techniques I’m experimenting with, but even without a Real Job I would be going at it 12 hours a day if I had it my way. Alas, I manage a few hours during the week and a few over the weekend. I really should simply transmute Goyablog into a Fotoblog, but I won’t — Goyablog has been around quite a while now and to kill it would be too sad. So, I figure the solution is to have two blogs! Goyablog for strictly non-foto-related stuff and then a fotoblog, the shape and content of which I only vaguely envision. Of course, this will probably mean even less posts for either, but it is what it is….

News: I had a piece (a 20×20 pinhole print called “Amnesia“) displayed at last Friday’s Untitled Art show. Sold a small 8×8 version of it at the Small Works table (the big pieces rarely sell) so I’m happy about that. Also, the same piece and the one I showed at the previous Untitled (and currently being displayed at a Vanderbilt-sponsored show) have both been accepted for a juried Black and White Media exhibit at a gallery in Louisville, Kentucky. It’s a slightly bigger deal than the Untitled shows, but not exactly the Big Time. At Untitled a elderly woman wanted a explanation of what a pinhole photograph is and how I produced them and it was gratifying that she was truly interested and then just assumed I had a studio in town somewhere. I told her I wish I did, but I just teach at Vanderbilt. “Oh really? What do you teach? Aesthetics?” To which I again said “I wish…”

Yes, it would be nice to parlay this hobby into a second career, but it ain’t gonna happen. Film photography cannot sustain anyone these days except for the truly exceptional artists. I content myself with the occasional cool pinhole or the latest retro-looking shot with these old barrel lenses I’m playing with. And the funky little Gakkenflex + Tri-X + Caffenol combo I’ve hit on. If I can display a few images in local shows and sell a couple now and then, that’s enough for me.

I’m gestating an essay about this attraction to the vintage cameras and film and desire to reproduce/emulate photos from a century ago. As if I have time for that….

How to Take Weird Fotos

16 September 2010
I put the vintage barrel lens on the Speedy to do old-style portraits of puppet heads caught in the Eiffel Tower.

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The Barrel Lens I Mounted On Speed Graphic

10 September 2010
This should produce massive bokeh. Just shot a few portraits with it, although I have no udea what the aperture is. Probably between 2.8 and 4.

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My Entry at 100 Oaks Med Center Art Show

10 September 2010

My latest score

1 September 2010
Six old Kodak shutters — all working fine– with various lenses. The whole lot for $40. Condition of them far exceed expectations; I was planning on reselling half to pay for the half I want to keep and use, but now I don’t know!

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Sara wins Tomato Fest Award!

14 August 2010

My just acquired Speed Graphic + accessories

13 August 2010
Now I can be an old-fashioned press photographer!
The camera is in great condition and came with all the original flash equipment, 28 old-school flash bulbs, 14 film holders (most with FOUND FILM in them!), and a kickass cool carrying case. The engineering is fabulous; the mechanisms magical. Love at first sight. I intend to use this as a quasi-field camera (it does 4×5 negatives) for landscapes, urban decay, as well as for portraits and experimentation with lenses not intended for it (such as projection lenses, Petzval lenses, loupes, etc.). It also has a double extension bellows which allows for 1:1 macro shots really close-up!
It does have a bit of a learning curve given all of the flexible settings it has: shutter-mounted and focal plane shutters; rise, tilt, and lateral shift movements; rangefinder, optical viewfinder, wire frame viewer, ground glass AND focal scale focusing, etc. I’ve learned the basics on it within an hour and could go shoot some sheets now, but I want to process the found-film in the holders first–one of the dark slides in one holder had a tab labeled “Wedding”….

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Chosen as Scenic/Rural Area Photo of the Week in Flickr Group

10 August 2010

You can see it among other fabulous shots here: http://goo.gl/04e7

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Cold War, 1962

31 July 2010

This is not, of course a missile taking off with me burnng up in the exhaust. Rather, it a full-size Cold War missile that stands in front of the Air Museum in Fargo, North Dakota (a state full of missile and radar sites).
Taken with homemade pinhole (made from empty iPhone 3GS box) and Fuji Acros 100 120 film, developed in Caffenol (8-5-1 in 500ml). There was an ever so slight coffee cast on the underdeveloped negative, but I toned it in Lightroom 3. This is a truly bizarre image. Underexposed/underdeveloped and seemingly fog with the coffee developer. I can’t make out the negative well enough to see what was going on with the flare on the edges — I think it happened while scanning the thin negative. I decided to go with it since it looked like it was blasting off. I applied a graduated orange-yellow mask to the flare from the bottom to about half way up. Originally the flaring reached the top, but I applied a dark mask from the top to about 1/3 down so that the top would look more like distant outer space. Or something like that….

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