Quantcast
Channel: Miami Street Photographer
Viewing all 99 articles
Browse latest View live

Printing in dark room vs film-to-digital workflow

$
0
0
I started in darkroom in my early teens, somewhere in 68 or 69. Back then, everything was simple: not too many graded papers available, one developer, water from the tap, fixer and free time, which I had aplenty. I did not use any advanced techniques. Masking with my fingers for dodging and burning was the farthest it went. Because of this, there were negatives I could print easily and some I did not know how to print, the negatives too dark or too contrasty...when I had one, I just skipped it. Here is one of the prints from the time: some TASMA film pushed to 500 ISO, some old paper my father gave me:


(View from my darkroom AKA attic room. Yelabuga, 1973)

I had been returning to darkroom many times over the years to print few family photos. In yearly 2000s, I resorted to digital processing of my films. Because of this, my darkroom techniques has not improved much...that is, until recently, when I started using a real big darkroom with all kinds of stuff regularly. Gradually, I restored my non-existing printing skills and went further. I started using split-printing on variable contrast paper, I cut masks and dodge/burn with different contrast filters, I use mainly RC paper but also fiber when I feel like it. I use different developers/dilutions for contrast control and for color variations. No toning though (not yet). Little by little, I started feeling confident enough to try printing "the bad and the ugly" : overexposed, underexposed, too contrasty, you name it...negatives. I use manual cameras most of the time; in real world of candid shooting often there is no time for fiddling with camera and as result I have this kind of photo junk all over my rolls. Even some of my most loved shots have wrong exposure, wrong development or both.

So, I decided to give it a try and spent some time printing from these crappy frames. In this post I'd like to share the results and compare printing in darkroom with scanning/processing/digital printing I had been mostly doing for the last ~ 10 years.
[Disclaimer:It is not a formal test. It is just my impressions. Its not digital in general or film in general. It is just my B&W films/paper and my scanning/digital processing.]

Ok, let start from the peculiarities of my digital workflow.

Scanning


For 35mm I use two scanners, one is old Minolta Multi II and another is Nikon V. The Nikon V gets most of the work. I use Vuescan because NikonScan software is clipping some highlights and I don't like this. Nikon V is noisy, slow, but good enough for my tasks. It has LEDs (Light Emitting Diodes) for a light source and because of this it tends to exaggerate the grain. In the darkroom world, I'd compare it with enlarger equipped with a point light source: prominent grain, high contrast, sharp edges, all irregularities like dust and scratches greatly exaggerated. Its just specifics for a particular film scanner and not all scanners, but that is what I am limited to in my film->digital workflow.

Digital processing


In case of film photography, digital processing in general and Photoshop in particular is atrocious. Its true; like a double-edge sword it cuts your instead of your enemy all the time... and ruined picture is just one click away. Don't get me wrong, I am not a novice, I use it for many years, I am very comfortable with it, I am in IT by trade. I profile my monitor, I control lighting in my room, and I try to process my images so that they would look natural. Still, I have many frames where I just couldn't quite get the image I want. For instance, the blur is out of the question -- use blur tool and it will ruin the grain structure while the very definition of 35mm pictures -- at least, my 35mm pictures -- is based on grain. Masks are powerful way to process scanned film images but one little mistake and you have visible artifacts. And the list goes on and on, counting every tool in PS's palette: curves, levels, filters, you name it. In my view, the ability to process films digitally did nothing good to many film photographers: their (printed in darkroom) pictures from the film era look great, but new work, also done on film, but processed digitally, look unnatural: too contrasty (levels, curves), too sharp in every dot (sharping filters), no details in shadows or, the other side of the coin, shadows HDRed to the point where you wonder: was it really shot on film?! In my film-digital workflow I try to avoid these but it had always been a struggle. It is especially hard with overexposed and problematic in other ways (for instance, pushed to the limits) negatives.

Digital Printing


I am not a very good digital printer, but I have 2 photo printers at home (HP 7060 and Canon Pro-100) and managed to configure them to produce fairly neutral B&W prints. I don't like much any of the inkjet papers I had to use; some I dislike less then the others. All in all, this step is the most simple and straightforward in my digital workflow.

Darkroom, Printing/Comparing


I took three negatives I know I had issues with while scanning, processing and printing digitally. In darkroom, I spent one hour on each; could easily be 3 hours/each, I just didn't have the time. Here are the best prints I've gotten:


(Calle Ocho, June 2011, Tri-X pushed to E.I. 1600)

This one was no problem: printed on Ilford MG RC IV 8x10 paper, aperture f/8, split printing in 3 exposures:

  • Filter #0 (low contrast): sky only 32 sec
  • Filter #0 (low contrast): all but left side (Cafe with the couple) for 32 sec, plus dodging cyclist's face for 22 sec during the exposure
  • Filter #4 (high contrast): whole frame for 18 sec, dodging faces of woman and cyclist for 10-12 sec.



Remembering how much time I spent trying to figure out how to process the scan and print it right, I was surprised how easy I've got descent print in darkroom. I was expecting more hard work. Here is the digital version to compare -- the sky is completely white -- that's because I could not get it without ruining the picture!

(South Bech, June 2013, Tri-X pushed to E.I.1600)

The negative is much worse, its grossly overexposed; I bet I will reduce it one day. To get some clouds, I had to do this:

  • Filter #0 (low contrast) at F/0 66 sec, sky and building on the right only.
  • Filter #0 (low contrast) at F/8 34 sec, masking (i.e. dodging) girl's faces for 12 seconds each
  • Filter #5 (high contrast) at f/8 26 sec, dodging girl's faces 10-14 seconds
It worked, to a point. The print is ok, but probably needs additional work (or better reducing the negative). Again, I was doubting my ability to get a descent print at all from the negative that dense...but it turned out to be not too hard. In the digital version note the horrible grain in the sky.

(Little Haiti, Kodak 3200 TMZ film @ E.I. 12500)

This negative had great difference in contrast between background and foreground, but it was task simplest of all:

  • Filter #0 (low contrast) F/8 for 34 sec dodging girl's figure and face
  • Filter #3 (normal contrast) F/8 for 44 sec
The digital version

Bottom line

It is not an impossible task to match or even surpass film-digital workflow in darkroom printing. There are few advantages I noticed while comparing prints made digitally to analog:

  • the grain structure is better on analog prints. And for me it is very important.
  • some artifacts present due to heavily pushed film are less noticeable on analog prints. For example, I spent some time battling nasty changes in brightness in the areas of high contrast -- for instance, on the image #2 that would be where cafe roof borders the sky. There was no such problem in the analog version of the print. I was expecting it, and it is there, but does not look too bad. It still has this look of pushed film, but not as much as digital print and as a result it looks much more natural.

The final word

If you had been scanning your negatives for some time, try printing in darkroom. The results may surprise you.

Dixi.

"IN OSAKA" by Yamasaki Ko-Ji

$
0
0

So it happened: the >book is out<<.
Yamasaki Ko-Ji is a photographer from Kobe, Japan. He documents his daily life with pictures taken mostly in Osaka, where he has a day job. His work is truly unique for these days: all film, almost all in black and white, all printed in darkroom. He is not very well connected to the online photography community of today. He has a site all right: http://yamasakiko-ji.tk/ , but he is not on Flickr or Facebook, so his work is not widely known, but for those interested in the style of "Provoke" movement (Takuma Nakahira, Daido Moriyama etc) he is important as one of the keepers of the flame. I love his work. My style is very different but his pictures have influenced me deeply and that is why I published his book.

This post is a quick review of the book from the publisher's -- mine -- point of view.


We all know what a photography book usually is: the while pages framing the pictures plus some text at the beginning and/or at the end. Well, at least that is what photography book have been for a very long time. There is a reason for this. The classical concept of a photography book represent a believe that photography print is a primary medium and a gallery exhibition is a primary way to view the photographer's work. So a photography book, in this classical concept, is a secondary representation of the said exhibition; with pictures on the pages representing the individual prints.

Now, this book is different. Pictures placed on the pages in different fashion: there are many full-page spreads, many pictures tilted at an angle, some in contact with each other and two even overlap! That is because of my believe that Yamasaki's work is not suitable for a "classical" presentation.

In his case, a book is the primary medium for presenting his work, not a print, not a gallery. A book.

There are no virtual gallery walls no prints hang here; you'll get what you see: a soft cover book of grainy and moody black and white pictures actively interacting one to another on its 180 pages.

The big numbers on the pages are not page numbers. These are image numbers. Just for you to know.

The paper in matte, no gloss, so is the cover.

The color shift you see in some of the pictures here is due to my photographing it at night under the artificial lightning. The B&W in the book is pretty neutral for the 10 copies I have seen so far.

the quality of the binding is good; it should not loose pages as did one the MAGNUM's monographs I own.

The book has an interview with the author at the beginning and a short biography at the end.

It has ISBN (978-1942180005)

It is in Library of Congress (2015939477).
The book can be ordered in a number of places at Amazon in USA or in Europe, but if you order it here:
http://darkslidepress.com use the code "W3TL8W8X" for 15% discount.

There will be an event in early August where you can hold the book and probably buy you copy; it will be at Leica Store here in Miami; exact time and date TBD. Stay tuned!

and this is the last page

Dixi.

Summer pattern

$
0
0
HP5-63-05-print-02pr1sm
I am really enjoying working in darkroom... Here is few more of the recent prints:

HP5-61-14-print-01pr1sm

HP5-63-17-print-02pr1sm

HP5-63-23-print-06pr1sm

Bessa L / 25mm / Red filter : new darkroom prints

$
0
0


Up until now I had just the digital scans and digital prints for this series of downtown street photographs from Oct 2008. Last week I printed them in darkroom, they came out good; better than expected, better than digital!


11x14" Prints on Arista EDU Ultra RC paper

$
0
0

I'm out of Ilford MG IV paper and switched to Arista EDU Ultra. All I have now is 11x14 inches. Last weekend I printed a few frames from 2012 and they came out fine. The prints are somewhat more neutral compared to Ilford (I use LPD developer in 1:4 dilution) and the image takes longer to appear in developer, but otherwise the paper is great. The office scanner I used does not do the prints justice, but that is what I have for this bigger format.





"In Osaka" by Yamasaki Ko-Ji at Leica Store Miami 08/20 at 7PM

$
0
0


Join us on Thursday, August 20, 2015 for a book presentation: "In Osaka" by Yamasaki Ko-Ji. Publisher Emir Shabashvili will present the book and talk about "Provoke" photographers and about style/time relationship in photography.

Yamasaki Ko-Ji is a Japanese photographer from Kobe who documents his daily life with street pictures taken in Osaka, where he works.

RSVP on the event page: http://goo.gl/H9hzIN


This event is kindly sponsored by Brooklyn Brewery. Participants will be able to sample some of their amazing craft beers during the event. Brooklyn Brewery is one of the largest craft breweries in the United States, producing a portfolio of traditional and experimental beers sure to impress any beer drinker.

Brownie Vecta from UK

$
0
0


I received this camera from the village North of Manchester, UK
Small Kodak Brownie Vecta had been in production from 1963 to 1966
Like many other brownies, it has dark lens and one shutter speed, not much to talk about.
This one had film inside, 127 Kodacolor II, exposed.
I developed the film as B&W just because silver survives the ordeal of time much better then the color dyes.
There I found four frames: dogs, woman, kids, cars...

The film was in production from 1973 to 1982.
Images look like 70s or early 80s.
The rover in the last frame seems to be more modern but this type of body was in production starting 1973.
Bye islanders, bye-bye sunny weekend, soon to become cloudy Monday...just like here, now.

118 Kodak Verichrome roll from 1940s

$
0
0

I received these rolls from a antique dealer in Fayetteville, North Carolina with 2 other rolls and spools of different vintage.The roll in the center never been exposed; the yellow color film (right) was empty. So what's left is this big bad spool of 118 Kodak Verichrome.118 format roll film was introduced by Kodak in 1900 and discontinued in 1961 but it was not in wide use after early 40s because the cameras made for this film format were out of production by 1930s.
I did my usual tests and developed the roll; a face appeared from the wet darkness:




This is an unusual set of pictures, for a found film. Young man in his late teens at graduation and after. The time frame is probably late 1940s (car's grille and woman's dress). As always, I wonder who was the photographer (parent, friend?) and why the pictures were not developed. I have a feeling that the photographer was old; probably grandparent of the young man. The one who received his 118-format Kodak folding camera somewhere in early 1900s, when s/he was also very young, and used it throughout the life developing and printing pictures -- that is, until this last roll. We don't know what exactly has happened but the film had been sitting exposed in the camera for a very long time. I know this because of the last frame; these white round spots are always there due to a slightly radioactive lens exposing film when camera is folded and left alone. The two white circles means that someone moved the film a bit at one point and again, let it sleep for years and decades. This last frame is a perfect metaphor of a passing time: one can see the shining cylindrical tube, the notorious way to heaven or hell, even the souls drifting to the center of the light and lingering on the edge...our young hero should be close to 90 today, one of these souls, leading the way for all of us.

.



Model A from Missouri

$
0
0
Univex model A was a camera. A very small camera.
Here is one, next to my "Zorki 5":



Three ounces of Bakelite with a bit of glass and a few metal parts.
It was very popular among girls in early 30s, because it was cheap.
Really cheap. Seriously cheap.
Here is the page of the Official Girl Scout catalog, year 1933:



It is called there "A New Camera" with a price tag of 35 cents.
35 cents! For the price, it was not too bad.
Unlike some other cameras (Japanese "Hit", for one) it could actually take a picture.
Sometimes adults used it, but most of the Univex's users were kids.
The idea of the Univex enterprise was to make money selling film, not camera.
The proprietary Univex 00 film model A ate had been manufactured by Gevaert in Belgium.
The idea worked: Univex sold millions of ugly ducklings until 1940, when Belgium went under and suddenly 00 film was no more.
That was the end of Model A.
End of story.
I received mine from a village in rural Missouri. It had exposed roll of 00 waiting inside:



I developed the roll. Just one frame survived:



The pretty girl is smiling.
Her colorful dress shines against the freshly painted white siding.
The smell of summer is the smell of paint and dry grass.
Its all open for her, all yet to come...

fin.

The Night at Ocean

$
0
0
This Saturday I've got a chance to stroll the South Beach. The Ocean drive was packed with folks celebrating, flirting, kidding, snapping selfies. My Olympus XA died after years of exemplary service but Lieca M2 worked and these are the pictures (Tri-X shot at E.I.1600 and pushed to E.I.3200 in TMax developer):

"In Osaka": one year anniversary

$
0
0


Yamasaki Ko-Ji's book "In Osaka", published a year ago, had been sold on Amazon and in stores around the globe exactly (ta-dam!) 50 times. Which brings the total print run, including all the copies sold online and offline, given as a present plus author's copies, to 100 (one hundred).

Congratulations to the author!

.............................................................................................................
To celebrate the 1-year anniversary of the book's publication, we are issuing the discount code for the book which can be ordered by clicking the link above. Here it is:

5A2XWLFC

Enter this code at the >checkout< and you'll get a $10 (25%) discount.

Pacific Image scanners

$
0
0
I recently tested these two scanners from Pacific Image:



Prime Film XE and Prime Film XA are also known as Reflecta ProScan 10T and Reflecta RPS 10M, respectively.
Resolution-wise, they both can produce scan at 4K+ dpi. The units I received both had problems:
- XA (the one at bottom) had inherent issues with its film transporting mechanism and it was a pain to align the frame properly.
- XE produced vertical stripes in the midst of the frame on some photos.
I only used them with 35mm Tri-X which is black and white film, slightly curled when recently developed.
I suspect they both will work better with modern C41 films, but I have not tested that as I have no desire to use this type of film.
I returned both.
Oh well..I will stay with my Nikon V, Minolta Multi, Minolta Scan Speed and Epson V700 Photo :D

On Pakon film scanner

$
0
0
Been film scanner operator for ~20 years, I tried many Minoltas, Nikons, Epsons ugly ducklings. I settled on Epson V700 photo for preview and Nikon Coolscan V for the final scans. Using this combo for a few years now, I scanned several hundred rolls and finally got tired of the slowness and the buzzzzzz.

Recently I started looking into the operatorless scanning of a whole roll of B&W 35mm film (I shoot black and white film only, no color). I checked what's available new on the market and >>tested<< Prime Film XA, also known as Reflecta ProScan 10T/10M in Europe. The PrimeFilm XA in theory could scan the whole roll, but in my case it did not work very well. Yes, when positioned right and the stars are perfectly aligned it could produce very nice scans; it also had some intrinsic deficiencies making the process very long, involved and tedious. I returned the PrimeFilm promptly.

Last week I tested Kodak Pakon F135 scanner; this is a pro scanner intended for the photolab market; it hit the shelves a decade ago and use to cost a wopping $12000 new; I acquired well-used specimen for ~$300.

After some testing I liked the little ugly beast and it stays. Here is what I found out, in a few words:


mine is branded "Nexlab"; its the same Kodak Pakon F135.
Specifications:
A/D Conversion: 16-bits
Output Color Space: 16-bit
Output File Formats: Planar (RAW), DIB, JPEG, TIFF, EXIF, BMP
Digital ICE™ Technology
Color Correction: Kodak Image Science
Scanning Software: Pakon Easy Order Scanning Interface (PSI)
OEM Software Interface: COM
Operating System: Windows XP
Interface: USB 2.0 (Dedicated port recommended)
Light Source: LED
Power Requirements: 90-264 VAC, 50/60Hz
Dimensions: (WxHxD): 8.6x6.7x14.9 in. (317 x 343 x 406mm)
Weight (approx.): 9 lbs. (4kg)

Computer Requirements:
CPU: Intel® Pentium III or AMD Athlon 700Mhz
4 GB (min) hard drive free space capable of 30 MBs sustained data rate
OS: Windows XP or Windows 2000 supported
Memory: 256 MB RAM
Data Interface: USB 2.0

Film Types:
35mm Color Negative and
C-41 Black and White with v3.0 software

Pakon Film Scanners Resolutions and Throughput
35mm Images/Hour DICE OFF DICE ON
1000 X 1500 ppi (Base 4) 661 496
1500 X 2250 ppi (Base 8) 293 220
2000 X 3000 ppi (Base 16) 240 ---

35mm Rolls/Hour *
1000 X 1500 ppi (Base 4) 27 12
1500 X 2250 ppi (Base 8) 20 9
2000 X 3000 ppi (Base 16) 10 --
* 24 exposure
The scanner has XP/Windows 2000-based software comprising few separate applications but since the requirements for the computer power by modern standards are low (see specs above) the system could happily run on a virtual OS. Many did just this but not me; I have older PC with 32-bit XP installed and had zero issues connecting the scanner to it and running the software. All I needed is to free up a few GB of disk space and connect scanner to a USB 2.0 port. After some testing and scanning a few rolls, here is the good and the bad of the Ugly --

Good.
1. The appearance of the scanner is extremely cool: yellowed plastic, strange forms; it is hi-tech and vintage at the same time; like a toilet from the soviet space station "MIR" I've seen once in the museum. I imagine the station been ditched; here its on TV, coming down in flames. Against all odds, the thing is in perfect working order and ready for a new portion of sh*t every single moment until the very end! :D
2. Using some strange unfinished piece of code called "TLX Client Demo" it could scan every 35mm frame at 2000x3000 and save it into 16-bit RAW file. (Standard photo Lab software PSI will give you 1500x2250 in 8-bit file).
3. Its super silent.
4. YES! It scans the whole roll fast (under 6 minutes) and without human interaction. Afterwards the framing can be corrected if necessary and selected (or all) frames saved to disk. The automatic framing is very reliable as the system scans the whole roll into one huge piece of data and divides it into actual frames programmaticaly; which brings us to (5) --
5. It is possible to scan panoramas of any lenght, as wide as the length of the film roll.
6. It is possible to scan a strip of 4 (and more) frames. Some reported 3-frame strip scanning but this I have not tested.
7. It is reliable but in case of a problem it is absolutely serviceable and the service manual is available for download.
8. I am delighted with the quality of the scans I got from Pakon while scanning Tri-X rolls. The grain is very nice, better than CoolScan's which I never liked. Nikon's grain is too sharp and too contasty for my taste. Tone-wise Pakon's scans are also great, most of the images can be used without much post-processing. And, if I still need a bigger scan...well, I do have Nikon :)
9. There is an active FB group dedicated to the scanner: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PakonF135/

Bad.
1. Its a decade old and could break.
2. Software...how to put it...do you remember Windows 2.0? Well, I do. Nevetheless, I can live with it, and after few rolls I even liked it. I am an old IT rat. I have seen worse.

Here's a couple of examples, as scanned, without any post-processing:




I have not tested color and Digital ICE since I do not shoot color film anymore.

There are higher grade pakons out there (F235, F335): same resolution, more speed. I almost ordered the F335 but decided on F135 because of the size and weight. F335 is too big for my office.

dixi.

Miami's Overtown

$
0
0


Overtown is a place just north of Downtown Miami.
Its use to be a real black town up until early 60s when the major highways were build through the area;
its mostly remnants of the past now, in a form of half-empty old structures with modern condo towers popping up, here are there.
Once a year,there is a street fair called "Overtown Music and Arts Festival" which I am trying not to miss.
Yes, its not the biggest one; the weather of mid-summer is atrocious; and it is scheduled for hottest time of the day. Still, its the best event in Miami one can photograph. Every year I bring something interesting from it.
Here is some of this year's pictures:

DASCO bakelite and the Langoliers

$
0
0


DASCO was (and the one above still is) a bakelite toy camera from 40s.
It is, in essence, a cheap piece of pressed plastic with few little metal and glass pieces.
It was made for 127 roll film.
The roll I found inside is Kodak Verichrome Pan. Kodak VP came out in mid-50s.
After the development, a few frames emerged: people, trees, automobiles.
Ah, 50s indeed (look at the cars and the hat):



The boy's shirt says "LARRY".



There is one more frame, the first and the oldest.
Its clearly taken in different settings but what's exactly on it is hard to tell:



I think I can see the house, two cars, and the woman with child. But this is just a guess.
Look at the fabric of the image:



these lines are the actual traces left by Langoliers, the eaters of Time.

Dixi.


Interview with Yamasaki Ko-Ji

Fujifilm photo walk with Fujifilm X-Pro 3 camera + 16mm f/2.8 lens

$
0
0

Hello All, it had been a while since I posted here...things changed.

In the government building where I work, the high security access had been implemented with X-ray machines and all the cavalry, it became a hassle to bring my film inside; I had to choose a digital replacement to my work-day-downtown-location film cameras.

I tried Leica M10-D and liked it but it is just a tad :) expensive for what it does.

I handled Sony fullframes (A7 III and few others) and actively disliked its ergonomics; so Fujifilm it is.

Yesterday I went for a walk with Fuji team around Wynwood Art District in Miami, FL. There were few of us, most chosen big SLR-form-factor-top-of-the-line mirrorless like Fuji X-T3, accompanied by substantial zoom lenses.

I took, of course, X-Pro 3 and little 16mm F/2.8 lens, a very compact setup, smaller than my Leica M2 with 35mm lens.

We went around the area which had been buzzing with activity due to Art Basel Miami time. I switched the camera's jpeg to ACROS BW film simulation with large grain I like my film photos to have and took some pictures along the route, a few of them presented below.

This was not a formal evaluation of the system, but my impressions are that this is very robust setup:

  • Lens/camera provide quick auto focus;
  • reaction time of the system is acceptable;
  • good flare resistance;
  • I liked the way LCD build with small one in the back and fold-out main one, nice idea which fits my shooting style.

While I usually shoot in black and white only now, I did processed some RAW files using FUJIFILM RAW app; hence some color images in the sequence. I was curious about Fuji film simulations, so all these color images are film sims. I liked the look of "CLassic Chrome" and "Standard Neg Hi", but that of course highly subjective, YMMV. Anyway, till next time...

.

Eliott Erwitt

$
0
0
Eliott Erwitt died today.
Here my photo of him peeking into the room before his lecture in Miami in 2014.
Taken on Tri-X / Leica M2 I think.

Expired in 1938

$
0
0
I have a small archive of old Kodak Verichrome roll film I acquired some years ago. The rolls are all exposed and stored in original boxes:

Expiration date in 1938:
Bought in pharmacy in small California town:
Yesterday I developed the roll. For a 90-years old film, the hopes are low. Even some shadows of shadows are a miricle. And the problem is not just the age of the film. The original Verichrome had very chemically active backing paper, which affected the film gravely, introducing strong fogging. So, it wasn't a big surprise when I the discovered very dark film after my usual old film development process. Still, something was there, and it went into scanning:
There is nothing to add, other then may be the photographer lived in Corning, CA and not just passed through, because there is another roll with the expiration date 2 years in the future with the same pharmacy ad slapped on the box.
Dixi.
Viewing all 99 articles
Browse latest View live