Large format lesson learned: use a fucking notebook

I like to load up several different types of film when I go out to shoot large format, at the very least a B&W and a colour negative. I usually try to stick to some sort of easy-to-remember loading scheme, like holders 1–5 are colour and 6–10 are B&W. Easy as that should be, I constantly got them mixed up in the field. Or I’d get it half-right, remembering that holder x held black and white, but forgetting that I’d loaded an ISO 100 film instead of the Tri-X I’d been using steadily for a few weeks, and shoot it 2–3 stops under.

A few weeks ago I was out shooting with my friend Jonathan and got the holders royally fucked up and ended up not getting several shots the way I wanted to. I didn’t get the results I was after, and I blew a good 20–30 minutes of waiting for light. No more!

I’ve always resisted carrying a pad, because documentation a) isn’t fun, b) is distracting, c) hurts (I have bad hands and writing is painful), and d) often seems to become a fetish, and I’m not interested in any of those things. But something had to give, so I ponied up the 89 cents or whatever it was for a little pocket notebook, in which I now keep a list of holder numbers and what film is in each, and other useful stuff, like bellows tables and the reciprocity corrections for the films I use.

Surprise! There is a middle ground between novel-length, Adams-style exposure records and not even knowing what film I’m shooting, and that works for me. In fact, I’m getting so enamored with not fucking that up that I think I’m going to invest in one of those Rite In The Rain waterproof notebooks.


Notebook page

One suggestion: get a notebook with a brightly-coloured cover so you can see it if it falls on the ground in the woods. Black, olive green, or camo seems like a bad way to go (YMMV).

Levi Hill and the controversial origins of colour photography

Did Levi Hill invent colour photography in upstate New York in 1850? Radio programme All Things Considered takes a look:

The Smithsonian is tackling one of the biggest mysteries in the history of photography — whether color photography was first invented by an American minister from Westkill, N.Y. His contemporaries called his work a fraud, but a new analysis suggests that the story is not that simple.

Listen to the segment online at NPR (requires Real Media Player or Windows Media Player)

BBC "Genius of Photography" series debuts tonight

The BBC’s six-part television series, The Genius of Photography, premiers tonight (Thursday, 25 October, 2007) on BBC Four at 9pm GMT.

Tonight’s programme is Fixing the Shadows:

Photography first came to life in Venice where Abe Morell used bin-liners and masking tape to turn a room into a camera—but the images created were transitory.

Henry Fox Talbot and Louis Daguerre discovered how to ‘fix the shadows’ to produce permanent images and at that moment photography was born.

Fixing the Shadows follows the birth of photography through to the age of mass photography triggered by the creation of Kodak by George Eastman.

See the BBC’s overview for more information.

Polaroid Week is looking GOOD!

Polaroid Week Fall 2007 is in full swing over on Flickr, and the pictures are looking good! Here are some highlights so far (posted with the kind permission of the photographers):

 

Untitled by Cate

Untitled, Cate

 

Belly by Jinnie

Belly, Jinnie

 

Ferry Terminal by Laura A. Watt

Ferry Terminal, Laura A. Watt

 

Untitled by Tony Sokolowski

Untitled, Tony Sokolowski

 

Untitled by gardengal

Untitled, gardengal

 

Rivulet by Roamin

Rivulet, Roamin

 

Polaroid Week continues through 7 October, so there’s plenty of time left to join in! Grab a camera and get shooting!

It’s Polaroid week!

Shoot Polaroids and upload them to the Polaroid Week 2007 group on Flickr:

Seven days. Seven polaroids. (or more if you’re so inspired, just not more than 3 a day)

Starting on Monday October 1. So, dust off your SX70, Spectra, 600 or Polaroid weapon of choice this week and start shooting!

Or dig out old squares you’ve found, stolen, or have had laying around since high school and scan scan scan.

Here are our requests: please post photos you haven’t posted on Flickr before. Meaning, give us something new — don’t contribute a Polaroid to this group that you already posted last May. That’s just plain lazy. Also, please don’t post more than three photos to the pool a day.

C’mon. Play with us. You know you want to.

Love,

Cate n’ Lori

It’s simple. It’s awesome. Get shooting!

Win a Holga from Squarefrog!

Squarefrog, who over the last year has put together what is far and away the most comprehensive Holga information site going, is having a one year anniversary contest. All you have to do to enter is fill out a very short questionnaire. The contest is open to everyone world-wide.

Prizes and stuff:

First prize – Lomography Holga 120CFN package
Second prize – Holgon Strobe Flash
Third prize – 5 rolls of Agfa RSX II 200 ISO slide film

All you need to do to be in with a chance of winning is to fill in the following form and click submit. The competition closes on Sunday October 7th 2007. Winners will be notified by email the following week. The information you submit is purely for my own interest, I would never pass on any of it to anyone!

I know Squarefrog online, and when he says he won’t give out your information, I believe him.

Enter here!