Showing posts with label Ilford HP5. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ilford HP5. Show all posts

Saturday, January 15, 2022

Here Come The Men

Morning folks - I hope you are all well and still breathing.

Today's wee post title was inspired by the following photo, captured on a tired, dull morning at the end of December.
Better get your suits on though, because, "Here Come The Men!"

Don't you think that in today's day and age - the Roaring 20's (sic) when "Anything Goes Dwarling" -the photo below is a total anachronism?


© Phil Rogers Dundee,Ilford Microphen 1+1,Hasselblad 500 C/M,Hasselblad 60mm Distagon,
Here Come The Men


I do.

I found it on the side of a closed shop in Dundee, beside a wee pend (Rankine's Court) leading to The Keiller Centre.
For those of you local, you know exactly where I am; for everyone else, this late 70's faux indoor market has had a chequered history. It sits on the site of the original Keiller factory,  purveyor of Jams and Chocolate; Cakes and Marmalades and so on - you've heard of both Dundee Cake and Dundee Marmalade right? Well this was their home!
The factory site was redeveloped in the 1970's. 
Apparently, for most of its life before it was knocked down, the lanes surrounding the factory smelled of cocoa and butterscotch.

When the Keiller Centre opened in 1979, it was quite a destination, butchers, bakers, fruiterers; record and video shops; clothes both new and surplus; confections and papers. People loved it.
But as with all things, its use declined. 

It was renamed the Forum back in the 1990's, but then was renamed with its original name in the 2000's because Forum sounded fecking stupid and I was inclined to agree. 
Today it is a small collection of stalls - I have no idea why someone doesn't revamp it as an Arts Centre - it would be perfect for that.

Anyway, in a weird case of happenstance and so forth, I am typing this from the scullery of a house built by a member of the Keiller family in the 1880's.
It seems appropriate somehow.

The thing I find most telling about the above photo is that someone has shot at the window with an air gun; I know, because back in the 1970's our Council house was at one time peppered with such shots. 
Oh yes, they loved us on the Racecourse Estates. The Estates actually became known as "Little Beirut" back in the 1980's. A shame, as I remember them as being a haven for working families with plenty of green space and amenities.

But back to the photo - regular readers will spot that it has, uncharacteristically for me, a curvy left wall; not only that but the whole picture is unbalanced with the openness of the frame at the right hand side meaning that everything is falling out of the frame - should have burned that side in a tad.

It was actually a really hard composition to juggle - the day was filthy and overcast and being in a small pend (or tunnel) and photographing something already dark was quite a challenge.
The exposure was 1/15th at f4! 
That was nearly the maximum aperture of the 60mm Distagon. 
The camera was entirely handheld and I was leaning back against a wall, whilst earnest businessmen with their coffees passed me in one direction and the homeless person at the start of the pend started looking at me and wondering whether I had any money.
Considering the above it came out surprisingly well.
I confess though, I DID have to crop the print, just to get things a little straighter.

It does seem madness going out photographing when you're a few days away from the shortest day and the skies are greyer than 10 week old underpants, however this was part of an experiment encouraged by Bruce from the Online Darkroom. 
Basically I used HP5+ rated at EI 800 and developed in 1+1 Microphen.
But where's the Pyrocat? I hear you ask.
Ah, my supplier has closed down.
I could mix my own, but in a bizarre mix of European Rules, Health and Safety and a lack of suppliers, I'd probably be the best part of £100 for all the raw materials. Granted it would last several lifetimes, but being now unemployed, it is not a thing I would consider.
Also, I've had a box of Microphen for ages and thought I should use it.

The results are OK all things considered - I'm not sure whether I'd continue with Microphen though as (having been used to the sheer economy of Pyrocat) that bottle of stock solution vanishes in a rapid and alarming manner. In hindsight I should have just gone the undiluted route and upped times with each use, but it is unfamiliar territory for me and I played safe.

Anyway, here's some more pics from the expedition:


© Phil Rogers Dundee,Ilford Microphen 1+1,Hasselblad 500 C/M,Hasselblad 60mm Distagon,
Manga Graffitti


Yep, camera shake is all over this, which is a shame as the image was a crisp as a packet of Seabrooks. Exposure was 1/60th at f5.6, and I was crouched and trying to make some focus sense from the dim conditions - sadly it didn't work.
But if I can't show you my mistakes there's little point in this blog - Art suffers triumph and tragedy.
Wait a minute, did I just allude to myself an 'artist'?


Tako Taal


This was a poster just outside the Cowgate Underpass - I rather was taken by the slapdash nature of the Bill Posters art.
It is an exhibition at the DCA by Tako Taal, who apparently is:

" . . . an artist and programmer. At stake in her artistic practice are the psychic structures of colonial relations, and the question of how vivid they remain in the present."

I'll counter this with:

Herman Sheephouse is a photographer and writer. At stake in his artistic practice are themes of permanence and the insubstantial nature of the digital world juxtaposed upon the need to leave some evidence of one's existence.

Don't you just love how today's artists have to be 'something' or have some sort of mission statement, rather than just making and enjoying art for the sheer joy of creativity!
I blame money.

Anyway, earlier, well a few steps earlier in fact, I had chanced upon a poster for my old lecturer/mentor Joseph McKenzie . . . or just plain Joe as everyone knew him.
I'll not go on about him too much - I've said it all already in FB.
He loved Dundee though, for its light and character and famously photographed the destruction of what could have been Scotland's answer to York.
The destruction wrought upon this City was (to my mind) as bad as Isis knocking down Nimrud.


Joseph McKenzie
A Love Letter To Dundee

The above is my tribute to the man himself - I'm sure he'd have liked this (well as sure as you can be of anyone else's opinion). 

It was taken in the underpass itself at 1/60th at f4.
I rather like the grittiness of the concrete showing through the frailty of the poster's paper. 
Joe would have questioned that and no doubt would have said something profound, witty and to the point.
The poster was OK but rather a poor reproduction, so here's the original photograph - a masterpiece.


© Joseph McKenzie Archive
"The Worker's Mansions"
From "Hawkhill - Death Of A Living Community"

The original print has life in the shadows and a better balance; it also has a glow which is probably a single-coated lens, and of course the quality of the paper shines through.

He pretty much used Galerie exclusively from the early '80's, though this print could well be from the time it was taken - 1971, so I've no idea what he was using then.
He was a great man and teacher though and I still can't believe he hasn't been better acknowledged by his contemporaries or the greater photographic world.
I count myself lucky to have known him and, well, you wouldn't be reading this had it not been for him.
He still is a legend.

It has been good having time to write this in a leisurely manner rather than my usual slap-dash, early morning panics to get another FB published. 
It is absolutely wonderful to be able to take my camera out when I please.
Time is the most precious thing we don't own.

And that, as they say, is that.
I told you this one would be brief didn't I.

Till the next time, be good.
H xx







Sunday, April 15, 2018

Well, This Is Three Wider.

Lovers of great comedy will excuse me for paraphrasing the mighty Nigel Tufnel from Spinal Tap, but I couldn't resist it; y'see, up to now, the widest angle lens I have ever used was a 24mm Nikkor, which is a bloody fantastic wee thing and has quickly become my semi-normalised (if there is such a thing) POV.
Well, this is Three Wider.

Curious?
Read on!


You know sometimes, you see something, but it doesn't register for days, weeks, months or even years later? Well, I've had one of those moments recently and boy did I follow through with it.






I can't remember where I first saw a Hasselblad Super Wide camera, but it was love at first sight, and little did I know, in those pre-internet days, that the camera was the embodiment of optical quality par-excellence.
It was an expensive camera when I first saw one back in the early '80's and it remained so for its whole life. I, of course, instantly dismissed it as being far too expensive, and I never bothered looking at them - they were beyond me.
So there I was, one early Saturday morning (it was raining outside in that typical East coast gloom you get around here in the Winter) with nothing to do, save drink tea and look at cameras (as you do) and I saw one on Ffordes website at a not too bad (though still punishingly expensive) price and thought:

Wow - that looks like a semi-ideal walkabout camera. 

I had been thinking about a 'proper' Rollei for such uses for a while, but I liked the cut of the SWC/M's jib, and I filed it in my mind.
It's an odd-ball (but then so am I) and specialised to the point of perverseness, selling to architectural, aerial, copy, documentary and just plain curious photographers. 
I was I think, baffled by how little it could do, and I guess that was what salted down in my subconscious for a few days. But I couldn't get it out of my head, and one morning I came to the conclusion:

Feck It. 
Not getting any younger. 
Could be dead in a few years.

So I talked it over with my wife (as supportive of everything as ever!), spoke to the esteemable Steve Byford at Ffordes, thought some more, swallowed hard and bought it.

It was one of those moments.

As you'll know from reading FB I've used a fair number of cameras over the years and have a small collection of choice cameras which I enjoy using, but these days I find myself drifting increasingly away from 35mm (simply because I'll never print a tenth of what I photograph) and even 5x4 (because it seems like a young man's game: requires determination and grit and decent eyesight . . not to mention patience and a great deal of core strength - certainly that is the case of hauling one into the wilds!)
I think back to the simplicity of my early days of photographic rediscovery, when it was just me and Ollie The Rollie T and how simple everything was.
The powerful drive of only 12 or 16 shots on a roll of 120 film seems to be the embodiment of ease-of-use, supreme quality and a considered approach to photographing all kinds of things.
I am not saying I am giving up other formats, far from it, but for general day to day use, Medium Format seems to be my Ideal Format.

Yeah, so skip the guff Sheepy - worrabout th'camera la?

Well, the box arrived, beautifully packed, and there, nestled in the bubble, was a camera that was all Hasselblad, but not that much bigger than a 500C/M with film back but no lens attached.
In other words it is smallish and compact - at 6-and-a-half inches long, this is about half the size of a modern SLR with zoom.
It felt considerably lighter than a 500C/M, and handled really well, only the strange viewfinder (like an old Dickensian Shoppe Window [you know the sort of thing, all distortion]) caused me some dismay initially, but I sort of knew from the moment I picked it up that this was the machine for me.

It is basically a 6x6cm version of the famous Rollei 35 and other zone focusers . . .
Optically, Wide (with a Capital Waah), the 38mm f4 Biogon is a lens borne from aerial mapping and the equivalent of 21mm in 35mm lens terms; its supreme quality married to a light-tight box with an interchangeable film back - about as simple as they come, yet simpler than an Olympus Trip (because that has a light meter of sorts!)
You could even say it is more basic than even the cheapest 35mm compact from back in the day because it doesn't even have the luxury of frame-lines for parallax compensation in the finder - yet for all its shortcomings, it is a camera which a lot of quite well-known photographers have said 'defined their career'.

Actually, the camera's lore is hard to get over:
Harry Callahan and Lee Friedlander to name but two.

Apparently, back in the 1970's and 80's pretty much every single SWC/M was assembled by a single person - Florence,
I know nothing about her save that her skill and craftsmanship and attention to detail served to float several thousands of these cameras out into the world, to be appreciated, used and loved. 
It is strange thought actually, but I suppose no different than other small quantity cameras, except I have no names for the Gandolfis and Alpas and Wistas of this world. Nor names for the skilled that used to work in the larger factories like Leica and Nikon, Pentax and Olympus et al.
A single model of camera being assembled by just one person is quite unusual, so, Florence it is.

Flo is no spring chicken - she was made in 1982, but that (to me) has a happenstance to it - it was the year Joe McKenzie properly took me and my compadres under his wing and started teaching us how to print and see the world.
There were a few marks on the body, though it was the older (1978) film holder that had sustained the most damage, but as I later found out, both body, lens, shutter and film back had been serviced recently, which was reassuring.
The optics were beautifully clean externally, but I found a small mark on the inner elements which worried me a bit, however after having words with Ffordes (who assured me everything was fine) I was determined to test her out - the mark was worrying (not fungus, as lens had been cleaned . . . the loose finger of a careless technician maybe???).
If I could provoke that mark into action that would be a bad thing, because my problem was that me and Flo had already bonded. Little did I know when I opened the box, that this Optical Orphan was looking for a good home, and like a bowl of cat food to a lost kitten on a Winters night, my warm greeting was enough for the camera to decide, I was the one that would look after it!
So, provoke I did . . . and you know what? could I heck get it to produce any veiling flare (the sort you get with haze or marks on inner or rear elements) at all.
Shooting into bright Winter sunshine produced a modicum . . . just like I would have expected with any camera as you can see from the results below.



Hasselblad SWC/M, Ilford HP5, Pyrocat-HD



The flare on this is as expected with the sun in the frame, but the big chunk at the lower right is a result of me holding the negative in its sleeve up to window and snapping with Sony A6000.
It is not a product of the camera.
So, Round 1 goes to Flo and boy was I excited by now!

More next time, as I try to get my head and technique around a camera that is seemingly so  simple, yet also incredibly hard to use . . .

Incredibly for FB, I am going to leave it there for the moment . . . I know you're getting tired and the nurse will be here soon with your tablets and so on . . and look, tonight, there's entertainment!
A memory therapy thing, so it's you, thirty old ladies and a charming singer called Michael, revisiting the great toe-tappers of the 60's!!
He's promising medleys from Dusty and Tom and The Bachelors and Freddie and the Dreamers and every wonderful hit from the era you can think of!
They said there might even be dancing.
Me? I'm staying in my room and putting on In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida.



SWC/M, Ilford HP5, Pyrocat-HD, Ilford MGRC.












Wednesday, January 06, 2016

Amateur Hour


Morning folks and greetings from the land of night.
Tayside has, for nearly a week now, been caught in a repeat system of low pressure and the sun hasn't really shone at all - in fact it has been a week of unrelenting rain and dreichness the like of which I can't ever remember. So on that note, I thought I'd cheer us all up with a trip back in time!

About 30-odd years ago, after my father had died and I had moved away to the all too distant environs of Dundee, my Mother (a woman of great resources and proper Blitz Spirit) battled on valiantly in our little cottage in the middle of nowhere.
I've written a lot about that place because it still means so much to me, however for her it was a rural solitude too far. She did try, but eventually succumbed to the intense loneliness, and, typical of her nature, decided she had to do something about it. So, aided and abetted by my Sister she decided she would like to move back to my Father's birthplace, Lincolnshire. She got a map, stuck a pin in it (literally) and looked at properties in the environs of the pin, ending up in a wonderful wee village about 20 miles from Boston, called South Kyme.
At the time I thought she was mad, truly barking, but after I visited her I realised that she'd made exactly the right choice. South Kyme had (at the time) a pub and a shop/post office and one of the strongest community spirits one could ever wish for. Community spirit isn't for everyone mind, but for Mum is was perfect and exactly the sort of elixir a sorrow and silence-hardened spirit could wish for. They welcomed her with open arms and she, in her typically ebullient nature, made friends quickly.
Her cottage was a semi-detached farm worker's cottage, it was small, cosy, had no front door (because of the prevailing winds), had an inside and outside toilet, an old pig-shed and a wonderfully overgrown garden that needed licking into shape. For Mum it was a panacea. The wonderful sandy soils of Lincolnshire meant she could grow wonderful veg, and everything she touched seemed to turn to green abundance. It was a little oasis of peace and happiness and very much a place of her making.
Ali and I visited it together before we were married (obviously I'd visited it before that too) and then at semi-regular intervals thereafter. When Alex Turnips came along we took him too and he loved the garden, my Mum's cooking and her slightly dotty happiness. The cottage only had two bedrooms - Mum's was at the front, and the guest room was at the rear. This initially had 2 single beds in it, but eventually this was changed to an enormous double on the bottom, double on the top, bunk affair, which took up the majority of the room, but was fun and comfortable.

Yes OK Sheepy, very interesting, but wot has it got to do with us?

OK - nothing actually, but it sort of does, because whilst staying in South Kyme I was fortunate enough to have several really good photographic adventures, so I am going to detail one of them and explain why I have decided to re-print the negatives.
At the time life was photographically very simple for me - I had a couple of cameras, but really all I ever used was my 1965 Rolleiflex T (called Ollie) and a rather spindly but functional Slik tabletop tripod. Metering was done by the ever-present Gossen Lunasix 3S, and apart from a cable release, that as they say was shallot. Incredibly simple really - I had a 16-on conversion kit for Ollie, but I rarely used it. Obviously though, as is so typical of our hobby, I hungered for better gear.
It is so typical isn't it - you always think the grass is greener and the better image is over the next horizon/new camera and life goes onwards till there really isn't much further to go and I've done that.
LF? Yep - TWO 5x4 cameras . . . no 10x8 though, that always seemed a bridge too far from the lugging around point of view. 
Good 35mm? Yep - got a Leica, got a full range of Nikon F stuff too. 
120? Well, yeah apart from the aforementioned Ollie, I also have a really nice old Minolta Autocord with an astonishingly good lens; I've also got the Koni-Omega rapid with the 90mm Super Omegon - again a truly wonderful lens, and really I have taken my 120 leanings to their nadir with the Hasselblad and the 60mm Distagon which is without doubt worthy of its reputation and the best lens I own . . . so where do I go now?
Well it's kind of perverse and in rather the same way that purchasing a Paul Reed Smith customised Custom 24 back in the early 90's (ordered from the factory no less) made me feel that I didn't ever need to struggle with guitar playing and subsequently meant I virtually never played another note on a guitar, so, buying the Hasselblad has all but deflated my photographic sails for the moment. 
I haven't wanted to buy a single thing since buying it, because where do you go? 
And more importantly WHY?
I love using the Hasselblad so much I feel that maybe I should cut-out everything else and just use it but then I know that won't do and I'll want to move into other formats at other points of time . . . and although this is an aside, it was this feeling about using my old cameras that made me think about my friend Ollie The Rollei again and realise that what I had with him was a very special relationship. 
So I started re-examining the several hundred rolls of film I'd taken with him and that led me to remembering photographic journeys and that led me to thinking about my Mum's hoose and hence this blog! 
You see, being a Sheephouse isn't all random stuff - there are sometimes thought processes involved and sometimes they work out fine!
So you've got the setting and the camera - how about film?
At the time I was using a combination of TMAX 100 and HP5+, but what I had forgotten from the notes was that I used Ilford's incredible Perceptol exclusively. 
I think that was Barry Thornton’s influence - I seem to remember him going on about it in "Edge of Darkness" - a great book by the way and well worth reading. In my notes I have written that I used it at a Dilution of 1:3 and at around 24° Centigrade, which seems way too hot, but that's what I have written.

Oh yeah, here's another aside:
Speaking to Bruce and people at Scottish Photographers meetings it seems like organisation of photographic media is something virtually non-existent
Why? 
It is easy and about a billion-times worth doing in that you can find things easily. For this blog, I went to my notebooks (which I have kept since film number 28) had a quick trawl through to 2004, scanned the notes, got the film numbers, found the negatives (all numerically organised per format) got the contact prints, again numerically organised and stored in boxes per format and went to the darkroom. The whole exercise took under 5 minutes. 
There was no 
"Oh schhhhhit, where the feck are those fecking negs? I knew I had them here, but they've gone OH SCCCCCHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHIT!" 
Nope, I tra-la-la'd and skipped all the way to the darkroom from my study (a skip of albeit two skips, but all the same). I did the printing and filed everything back where it belongs. 
A Piece of Piddle.
So all I can say to you, is that, if you haven't got your negatives and contacts organised, please spend some time and do so - doesn't take long, can be as simple or not as you like (I like 66/1, 66/2, 66/3 . . or 35/1, 35/2, 35/3, or 54/1 . . . get my drift?) but is so worth doing I shouldn't even be telling you.


Right, onwards with the printing (at last they cry, at last) and here to welcome you to her lovely hoose is my old Mum, Lillian Mary Ellen Rogers - be sure to get some fresh welshcakes and butter too whilst you're on your tenth cup of tea!



Lillian Rogers

Actually, this is from the same bunch of films the prints for the article are from. That one was made on Kodak TMX 100 and developed in dilute Perceptol.
It was made on Ollie the Rollei at f5.6. No idea of the shutter speed though. It was handheld too and demonstrates why Rolleis are probably the ultimate portrait-making tools.
It has captured my Mum perfectly and of a lifetime of photos, I think this is my favourite.
The print of Mum is an older print, on Ilford Grade 2 Galerie - it is untoned, and I made it about 4 years ago. I haven't needed to change any contrast or brightness whilst scanning - it is, as is.

Right, the prints below are all reprints.
I had had a go printing them all back in 2004 when the negatives were made but I always felt the prints made then lacked that certain something and were a bit heavy-handed as it were - you'll know what I mean if you print much - things were either too contrasty or too dark or the balance was off a bit, or I'd just not got things spot on . . . you know the sort of thing.
These reprints were all printed on that ancient Agfa MCC fibre I have been trying to use up, and because of base-fog, they've all been printed at the equivalent of Grade 4 (I dialled in 100 units of Magenta on the DeVere's colour head).
Despite its obvious age, the Agfa is still an extraordinary paper and I fell whilst the scans below are OK, they haven't done any justice to the prints physical qualities - there's an air of the wonderful fenland liquid light visible in the paper which doesn't translate very well to the screen. Och well, that's life I suppose - you could maybe pop over some time and have a cup o' tea and I'll show them to you . . .
The prints are all developed in Fotospeed developer, stopped in Kodak Indicator and fixed in Ilford Rapid and then toned in Kodak Selenium and air dried by hanging from a line in my darkroom using plastic clothes pegs - why plastic? Wooden ones actually transfer splinters to the print! I had to use a little PotFerry on print 3 just to aid the atmosphere, this was thoroughly washed under running water before the selenium - if you don't you end up with mysterious staining.
Oh, and that curious curve to the rebate at the top of every frame? It's the curve of the film as the photographs were taken - these negatives were held in the glass carrier on my DeVere (and were thus utterly flatter than a piece of paper, steam-rollered and then placed under a 20 ton weight - in other words FLAT) and whilst I always do that old photo-journalist trick of braking the feeder spool (with my thumb - thus increasing film tension) as I am loading the take-up spool on Ollie (and indeed any camera that uses 120 film) it has done nothing to take away the horizontal curve across the film's horizontality (as it were) . . . see me afterwards for a more thorough explanation!
See what you think though and I'll detail the wee adventure after . . . just going to go and put the kettle on.



Kyme Fen 1





Kyme Fen 2





Kyme Fen 3




 
Kyme Fen 4 



The adventure unfolds:

Now, if you can imagine . . . it doesn't happen very often in this world these days, but I was awoken by a cock crowing! I guess a lot of people would call it annoying, but I think my farm boy genetic roots didn't mind at all - a new day was dawning, so it was up and at 'em!
The light was just greying into life and I left Ali and Joe soundly asleep in the bunks, hauled my 'outdoor' clothes on, grabbed the camera and tripod and crept downstairs and out into the mild and mystical dawn. Dawn, especially in Spring and Summer is my favourite time of day - the air just smells right and there's no noisy cars around, though this being rural Lincolnshire there was a fair bit of haulage going on - farm produce and livestock - that sort of thing.
The Kyme Eau (which is what it is called) will give you an idea of the areas deep roots, and though that is a Norman name, in reality this little piece of heaven was undrained Fenland occupied by fishers and farmers right back into the Neolithic.
There was a fantastic book about SK by Margaret Newton - it was called "South Kyme - The History Of A Fenland Village" (ISBN 0952481804) . . . good luck finding a copy if you're interested!
Anyway, luckily for me, even though the area is 'proper' working farmland and has been worked and worked for centuries, somehow the light which must have shone over those olden Fens has been retained and there is an air of stepping back in time (despite the telegraph poles in KF 2 and rubbish like the MacDonald’s carton in KF 4).
On that morning that light existed.
It is watery and soft and translates beautifully into silvery greys in prints. Honest, it is so transaparent and fresh and quite unlike anywhere else. The skies are big too around that part of the world due to the flatness of the land and this lends a vast airiness to the overall scene.
As I stepped out along The High Street (actually just a road through the village - if you want to see it - Google Maps - put in the postcode LN4 4AD) I could feel an atmosphere gathering. As I often do when setting out to seriously make photographs, the combined weight of all the old 'tog ghosts lands upon my shoulders willing me on to make the most of it.
I turned left and heading towards the Church following the metalled road and then climbed a gate to access the path that runs along the river. The Church is beautiful and was visited a number of times by Henry VIII - it still retains that air of a place cut-off from the world and it really was like stepping back in time.
The fields shimmered with a really heavy dew and my feet and trousers were utterly soaked in a few steps, but what did that matter to me! The dawn chorus was full-on, spiders webs dripped with dew and light and I can truly say that life doesn't really get much better.
Aware of just how fleeting the dawn was, I shot quickly with the Rollei T mounted on my trusty, Bambi-legged Slik tripod and an old Prontor cable release pressed into action.
I surprised myself, getting more soaked as I strode boldly across wet fields. No wellies for me - pah!
Here are the notes I made at the time:



Please excuse the scrawl, but I can read it . . .
And then the sun arose properly bathing me in warmth and light and making my trousers steam! I knew that that was it, I could take no more, but with a little luck I had got what I wanted to get.
The proof though would be in the developing.
I slowly wandered back to Mum's house breathing the fresh air and listening to the sounds of a world awakening.
I let myself in, quietly climbed the incredibly narrow and steep staircase, snecked the latch on the bedroom door, got undressed and slipped back into bed beside a warm wife and (despite the cock still crowing) went back to sleep for another couple of hours.
We got up to my Mum's clatter and her usual "just-to-get-you-going" mega-feast of breakfast and another day of our holiday.


Now that Mum is dead I can look back on those holidays we had there with great fondness for all the laughter and fun and talk.
Ansel Adams once said someone described Edward Weston's Carmel house as "the little house with the big mood" . . . I think I can say the same about South Kyme.


And on a final note:
 
I know most of you probably think it is a faff, however time and again I've found making notes about every film you expose to be revelatory and totally useful at later dates! My original notes were made in a small Tesco notebook, however these days, my notebook of preference is a nice little ruled Moleskine - they're well-made, have acid free paper and the little band to hold the pages together lasts and lasts. I usually detail everything like exposure, lighting conditions, film, film number, developer, temperature, agitation as well as small details of the trip - here's a recent trip:




They really do come to life, especially after a few months have gone and you've forgotten everything you did to make a certain picture. As far as I am concerned, make notes - it's a no-brainer.

TTFN and remember to phone your Mum.











Friday, November 22, 2013

Things To Do When It Is Raining

Morning folks - I know, I know . . where have I been?
No doubt you'll have a mind's-eye picture of your intrepid Blogger, stepping out of a train carriage somewhere, camera tucked underneath his arm and steely glint in his eye with the thought towards a photographic expedition . . 
Well it has been all of that, and none of that.
I have been photographing, but I've not been detailing it in the way I have previously for some simple reasons . . the first of which is childish - apart from a handful of kind comments, nobody gets in touch! I am a sociable person, but it often feels like I am firing these blogs out into the ether like orphans . . left to make their own way in a dark world. It is disconcerting!
So say hello . . the contact form at the side makes it easy. 
The comments bit at the bottom makes it easy.
Just saying . . that's all . . nagging over.
The other reason, is that I just plain haven't felt like it actually. 
There. 
Simple.

Anyway, the other thing I have decided on is to try and slim things down. FogBlog became more bloated than a walrus on a cod binge! It was vastly intensive to read. I mean, those of you who have read a lot of the stuff have been brave and sterling - kudos to you, because it took a lot of time (I know, I've re-read them!) and time as we all know is a precious thing, not to be wasted on mere fripperies like a madman's ravings! 
So to that end, at the moment, brevity is hopefully the way and you can leave these pages happier human beans.





Large Format cameras. 
Gosh they're great aren't they? 
You can do almost anything with them, really - you can.
However there are times when they are dashed inconvenient . . in fact . . dare I say it, there are times when I'd rather be toting a tiny point and shoot. 
That comes as a hard thing to say as I love using mine, but at times it's the sheer effort involved that gets me - I average 30 minutes per exposure . . which does seem rather crazy, especially when you see some of the dog's dinner photographs I have made in those countless 30 minutes! 
Not only that, but come Winter, unless you are incredibly brave, strong and fit, and either don't mind being stared at or are happy lugging that gear for miles so you can photograph in peace, then the creative urge to use one of them can get rather hobbled by self-doubt. Add to that the double frustration of your own inabilities/raging at the weather and the timeless LF photographer's cry of: 'Oh God! What's the fucking point!, becomes a poignant and appropriate call to arms!
Oh yes, follow me on any of my expeditions at this time of year and you'll often hear that shout echoing off a hillside somewhere deep in the Glens. 
Frustration is the order of the day, closely followed by the cold
Let me say this,  it is a mugs game trying to adjust a camera properly in a windchill of -15
Add to that the biggest pain of the lot . . . steamed up ground glass . . and you have a tantrum waiting to happen! 
I have at times exited my billowing dark cloth in a hail of swearing only to look at vast clouds of steam falling out of the end of it - the camera on a tripod looks like some strange wood and metal Yosemite Buffalo/Bagpipe beast, snorting and champing in the morning light. 
Well why not hold your breath when you're under there, I hear you say.
Yes, I could hold my breath, but even then the heat from my face is enough to fog everything . . and don't even talk about loupes. 
Look. Don't go there. Right? I've told you already . . just don't munchen it!

Wind
(mph)
Temperature (Celcius)
1050-5-10-15-20-25
105-1-7-13-19-25-31-37
200-6-13-20-27-34-41-48
30-1-9-16-24-31-39-46-54
40-2-10-18-26-34-41-49-57
50-3-11-19-27-35-43-50-58
60-3-11-19-27-35-43-50-58
70-3-10-18-26-34-42-50-57
80-2-10-17-25-33-40-48-56
90-1-9-16-24-31-39-46-54


It is very easy to see from the above that a Large Format photographer's life (at times) is not a happy one - at a temperature of 0°C and a lazy wind of 10 mph you're into serious windchill territory. 
Now factor in that when I go hill walking I regularly encounter 40 mph winds and it starts to get deadly serious . . not least because the camera/dark cloth will start to act as a sail. Try  holding one down in 40mph winds at 3000 feet . . 
Then factor in the cameras construction - I guess the whole reason wooden field cameras are still popular is because of the entirely obvious thing that metal and Winter don't really mix well. 
I've used a Sinar in the field at well below zero, and I can honestly say it is a deeply unpleasant experience
It is a hardy soul who ventures far with a big boy's camera in the Winter - I really marvel at how Ansel Adams and all those wonderful American (and European) LF landscape guys managed/manage.
So where does this leave us?
Grounded and frustrated? Angry and kicking the cat? 
Well no. Just because you can't get out and about doesn't mean you can't do anything.
You can still photograph around the house.
Wot's that? Pictures of furniture or walls, or paint drying?
Well no - over the years I've quite enjoyed setting up little scenes and snapping them. They're not still lifes or found objects (though I like those too) but little Pictorial things. 
They're fun and easy and with a big camera and a wide lens you can adjust to your heart's content.
It's just something different really.


The following two images have three things in common - both were made on the Sinar, both were made in the Autumn/Winter with heavy rain/snow on the ground, and both were made with the tiny, junky, universally dismissed Schneider 90mm Angulon f6.8. 
Two very different images I am sure you'll agree, but it just goes to show what you can do if you put your mind to it. 
I know which I prefer.



Winter Mausoleum




Lazy Afternoon


The first image is of a mausoleum - it was made at 3.30PM on the 27th of December 2009 with HP5 rated at EI 320 and developed in Barry Thornton's 2-bath developer. The stonework was placed on Z VI, but at f22 and accounting for reciprocity, this resulted in an exposure of 145 seconds . . Brrrrrrrrrrrr
Standing around, waiting for time to happen . . triple Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!

The second is a self portrait (don't worry, that isn't my bra) made in the afternoon of the 25th October 2009 - I had gone out and been defeated by torrential rain, so had stomped home and set my brain to work.
Film was Adox CHS 100 (the old original version) developed in 1:50 Rodinal for 10 minutes 30 seconds.
I used 9 degrees of front swing and shot wide open at f 6.8. 
It's dreamy and creamy and the film/developer combo is delish! 
I'd focused on a shoe placed in the bed at where my foot would be and had carefully moved it and used a long cable release. 
Result.


So there you go ye men of LF . . be defeated not by weather. Just because it is snowing/raining/pitch black doesn't mean you can't have fun!
In the words of the band Stretch, 'You Can't Beat Your Brain For Entertainment'