The Invisible Photographer

~ A look at the widely varied world of light-created imagery.

Monthly Archives: April 2016

People Photographs Continued

27 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Digital Photography, Film Cameras, film photography, Portraits and People, Uncategorized

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Tags

"photography", black and white, black and white photography, candids, film photography, people, people photography, portraits, portraiture

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Young man in Silver City, New Mexico.

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Card player in Gila, New Mexico, whom I found sitting outside a farmers’ market. He was proud of the Minolta film camera and lenses he still owned. I can identify with that, at least with Canon and Nikon film cameras!

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A good friend of mine many years ago. I’m not sure who the person is that was with him. The camera was a Contax RTS II with  a Carl Zeiss 50mm f1.4 lens.

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Performer at an event in Denton, Texas.

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Photographer in Denton, Texas.

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Revelers in Denton, Texas.

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I enjoy shooting bearded subjects.

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Young lady from Bulgaria I met at a park and later met her there for a portrait session. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Aoife O’Donovan, folk singer, performing in Silver City, New Mexico’s Pickamania.

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Mrs. Roy, librarian at one of the schools where I taught, Wonderful person! Hasselblad 500CM by window lighting with fill.

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A senior portrait moment, using Nikon D700.

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Candid in Hatch, New Mexico, at the Chili Fest.

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Canon AE-1 program candid near downtown Dallas.

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Canon AE-1 in downtown Dallas.

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Canon AE-1 in downtown Dallas. She was helping coordinate a Walk for the Cure event.

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A group of young journalists I found along the route of the 2015 Tour of the Gila Bicycle Race Criterium in Silver City, New Mexico.

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Pinhole candid. Camera was Canon 5D Mark III with the body cap being converted into the lens.

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Ron, in downtown Silver City, New Mexico. He designed motorcycles.

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Biker in Silver City.

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Another beard, Silver City. 5D Mark III.

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In Silver City also.

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Cyclist at Cow Creek Classic Ride starting in Waxahachie, Texas. Canon 5D Mark III and Canon 100 – 400 zoom.

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Self portrait of a much younger me. Shot, probably, with 4 x 5 using Polaroid back, judging from the goo on the edges resulting from the coating process. Never was much good at that.

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Candid shot of a biker in Silver City, New Mexico.

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Candid portrait, Silver City, New Mexico. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Semi candid beard portrait in Silver City.

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In Silver City.

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Three more senior moments in Silver City.

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I liked how the mouth had to speak for the rest of her. Silver City.

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Young man in the outback of Silver City.

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Silver City. I wish I could recall all the names.

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Cowboy in Silver City.

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More Silver City. A good place for this!

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This young man was in town to attend a convention of hippies in a nearby national forest. I’d have liked to have gone there to shoot, but couldn’t get any idea of where it actually was! In some parts of New Mexico, it really is a step back in time.

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In town for same convention!

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Lorenzo, street musician.

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Street musician in Silver City also.

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One day I was attempting to sell photos by the street in Silver City. These two young ladies happened by.

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This gentleman was a classical scholar in earlier days.

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I saw this young Irish woman across the street with her guitar case. She was traveling all over the US and was leaving to return to Ireland in a few days. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Local merchant of antiques.

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Young man outside the Javalina Coffee Shop.

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I was put in mind of Wild Bill! Silver City, Canon 5D Mark III.

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Jim, a cowboy in New Mexico from Nebraska.

 

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Gentleman in Boquillas, Mexico.

 

 

 

 

 

People over the Years

27 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Digital Photography, Film Cameras, film photography, Portraits and People, Uncategorized

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"photography", black and white, black and white film, black and white photography, candid portraits, film photography, people photography, portraits, portraiture, studio portraits

I took up the thought this morning:  “What if I tried to put together in one place a collection of people I’ve snapped over many years?” I thought about what I had seen in an old external drive I was perusing yesterday. So, I’ll try to do something here.

In spite of my somewhat retiring nature, I have managed to ask some strangers if I might take their pictures. Here I will also include some people close to me as well. They may be people from the long past, but they were at least close to me.

Some are street candids, some are street informal where subject is aware of the photo being taken, some are “studio,” some are taken at events and many different film formats as well as digital are used.

I think that although I consider myself more of a nature/landscape photographer, the human landscape it much more varied and interesting. There are limitless possibilities of expression in a single visage.

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Young woman at school where I taught, an assistant. Shot with Pentax 6×7 and studio lighting.

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Another teacher at same school. Taken with window backlighting and some shadow side bounce light with Hasselblad.

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Young man I saw in New Mexico.

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There’s a used bookstore in downtown Denton, Texas, called Recycled. This is one of the owners. Shot with Canon AE-1 Program.

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His name was Arleigh. Hasselblad 500 CM was the camera.

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Tom, a geography prof. Shot with a 4 x 5 camera using Polaroid’s type 55 Positive/Negative film.

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One of my students by window light using Hasselblad.

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Beatriz, overcast day, 35mm film camera.

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Twins. Shot with Hasselblad.

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I met this couple at a park as they were training for a hike along the Appalachian Trail, going into the part that traverses the Maritime Provinces. I hope they made it OK.

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Self portrait, playing with a soft box. Nikon D700.

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I hope you can sense she was a flaming redhead. Digital, Canon 5D Mark III, at an event in Denton, Texas.

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Polly, a city councilperson in Silver City, New Mexico. She owns the  Javalina Coffee Shop there, quite a unique place!

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Mrs. Grimes, my second grade teacher. Shot with a Pentax 6 x 7.Mary Grimes_9647672887_o.jpg

Mrs. Grimes shot with a 4 x 5 camera.

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Lorenzo and Breeze in Silver City, New Mexico.Lorenzo and Breeze_15418429930_o.jpgBreeze_HC_o.jpg_48A1119.jpg

I thought it might be worth more than one capture of them. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Young man I found at Dallas Whiterock Lake with his guitar, composing a song. Canon AE-1 Program.

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Jimmy Porter, mentioned in earlier post about platinum/palladium print of this image. Nikon FE on Kodak Technical Pan film, 25 ISO (ASA in those days).

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Young man sitting outside of a cafe in Denton, Texas. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Young woman in Silver City, New Mexico. She goes to China to “rescue” traditional clothing and bring it back. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Russ owns an equestrian supply store in San Lorenzo, New Mexico.

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Rudy lives in San Lorenzo.

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This is a psychologist in Silver City. I saw her in an art store and followed along to ask if I might take this photo. Of course she wondered, “Now, why…..?”

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Frank, in Silver City. He is a Vietnam War veteran. Canon 5D Mark III.

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Same couple shot with Canon 5D Mark III through a lens designed for smaller sensor.

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In Silver City.

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In Fort Worth Stockyards.Dr Chapel.jpg

Former elementary school principal in Dallas.

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I met this young woman as she man….womanned a booth at an event in Denton, Texas. When I suggested she might consider modeling she told me she already IS a model!

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I met this nice group near downtown Dallas one summer day. Canon AE-1 Program.

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My college roommate. Taken in Big Bend with a Wisner Convertible Classic 8 x 10 view camera.

Apparently I’ve reached my photo limit on this post. To be continued on next…and maybe next!

 

 

 

 

 

My Best Platinum/Palladium Print So Far

21 Thursday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Alternative Photographic Processes, Uncategorized

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african american, alternative photographic process, black and white, film camera, film photography, platinum/palladium printing, platiumn/palladium, portrait, senior citizen

For you who are holding your breath until my next exciting installment, here is one of today’s outcomes. This one actually has some strength. I was pretty frustrated earlier today until I checked again in my book on alternative processes and got reminded to mix enough emulsion for the next size up when being a beginner. My earlier (expensive trash can material) prints today were mottled and streaky. The coating wasn’t getting onto the paper for good, even coverage. So I counted drops into the shot glass for a 5 x 7 print to do a 4 x 5 and things were much improved.You really hate to botch these prints because of the  cost and time consumed in finally being able to determine that a particular effort was in vain. I was about to ship my UV box back to Austin…

For a little background into this subject, I will copy and paste from one of my other blogs about sandlot baseball games during my middle childhood:

“If we were lucky, Jimmy Porter made an appearance as well. Mr. Porter had been a player in the Black Baseball League and had come to Carrollton in the 1940’s. He is another topic altogether, but I’ll touch on this here. He would come to the field and coach us some. I particularly remember a lesson on laying down a bunt. He would tell us about life and caution us on keeping our behavior in good order. Jimmy would pitch, but would always stand between the mound and second base for our safety’s sake since he was pitching the ball harder than we might be used to from the boys our age. I remember his bats. They were heavy and seemed as thick as tree trunks. He’d carry two or three around, gripping all of them with one hand, the bats protruding out over his right shoulder with his old glove fastened over the end of one. We were his ‘little friends’ and he has a peewee league field named after him today.” This is the man pictured here:

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I took this picture in 1982, I believe, using a Nikon FE with a 55mm micro Nikkor attached. The film was Kodak Technical Pan and was shot at 25 ISO of all things. (It was the best sharpness solution for those of us who didn’t have a large format camera.) I have no idea how I got a sharp picture. I was pretty new at photography. He was sitting outside an old storage building facing the already set sun in the west. I asked him and his friend Ira if I could take their pictures. I did one of each man solo, then of the two of them. This is the only image I have to work with now.

I printed each of them an archival 11 x 14 and toned in Kodak Poly Toner. I put in frames to give them. When Mr Porter here died some few years later, someone got the print I gave him into the hands of the now long expired Dallas Times Herald. My picture showed up on the front cover of their weekly insert mini magazine. I found the print sometime later in an old historical house in Carrollton, Texas, where all this happened. It was upstairs as a part of their small museum. I’m not sure where it is today. It may be there. I’ll go look sometime.

Anyway, I’m glad to have made this my first Pt/Pl print I really like and to have learned how to do better in the future!

One Morning on the Beach

19 Tuesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in Digital Photography, Travel, Uncategorized

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birds, dawn, dead shark, galveston, galveston island, galveston texas, gulf of mexico, morning, ocean, shark, sunrise, wildlife

We got up early in Houston to make the 40 something mile drive to East Beach on Galveston Island. My goal was really to catch some waves with camera on a tripod to get the dreamy blur effect. However, as soon as the sun was rising, I couldn’t use the shutter speeds needed for the blur. I got these:

 

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The Houston Ship Channel is here and I got this of a ship on the horizon:

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There was a shark on the beach that, apparently, his friend buried in the sand and then swam off and forgot to extract him:

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This could be his friend, a hammerhead supine nearby. Maybe he died from the exertion of burying this shark:

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While you would think other animals would be in mourning, these guys weren’t at all upset:

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Laughing gulls!

The camera was a Nikon D7100 with dirty sensor and a Nikon 16 – 85 zoom (using split graduated ND filter) except for the gulls which were captured the next day with same body and Sigma 150 – 600 Sports version of that lens.

 

Galveston, Oh, Galveston

19 Tuesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Digital Photography, Film Cameras, Travel, Uncategorized

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"photography", black and white, brazos bend state park, Digital Photography, film photography, galveston texas

Some shots taken with iPhone and Fuji 645 camera on 120 film.

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These were with iPhone. We found back alleys more interesting than the fronts of the buildings, mostly shops, of course.

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Front of a church in Galveston.

Field of Grass and Tree

This was actually not in Galveston. It was at Brazos Bend State Park a week earlier. Just didn’t have roll of film developed yet at that posting, so I’ll just put it here if it’s OK.

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Spanish moss on tree, also at Brazos Bend SP. I’ll beseech your indulgence for posting it here due to same reason as stated above. I look forward to actually printing these on silver paper or maybe even give it a shot on platinum/palladium.

Platinum/Palladium Printing

19 Tuesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Alternative Photographic Processes, Uncategorized

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"photography", alternative photographic process, black and white, platinum/palladium printing, platiumn/palladium

I finally got into this process after months of scavenging the equipment and materials from various places. The first UV exposure box was faulty, so I had to get a new one. I kept learning about a new chemical or safety step I’d need to take.

These prints would have to be seen “in person” to be truly appreciated, of course. They are done on a hand-coated heavy art paper, and take about an hour each, not including the production of the negative. It’s necessary to expose in a contact printing frame after the paper has been coated and has dried. It’s nice, though, because the light-sensitive material mostly reacts with UV light, so a low intensity incandescent bulb is OK for lighting up your work area, especially helpful during the paper coating process.

You must mix your own emulsion to coat the paper, using varying quantities of different chemicals, and varying the amounts of each to get different results. I say platinum/palladium, but most of what I used was the somewhat less expensive palladium compound, since platinum compound runs about $10 per ounce. I put about a third platinum and the balance palladium.

Coating the paper can be done with a brush or with a peddle pusher. I used the glass rod to push the light-sensitive material across the paper:

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Please imagine there’s a small amount of orange-colored liquid along the edge of the rod. The trick is to get the paper evenly coated.

Then, after you have allowed the emulsion to dry on the paper, take it and place it together with the negative in a contact printing frame. Your print will be the size of your negative, so you make it accordingly. This negative was made from a digital file in PS and Lightroom, and then printed on a special transparency material in my Epson printer.

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Next, you place this ensemble into a UV light box manufactured in Austin. It’s something you must use with respect, since it uses several fluorescent light bulbs to give off a tanning booth strength light. You can also do this in sunlight outdoors if the weather and climate cooperate. The exposure time can vary quite a lot, but 5 to 10 minutes has been usual for me so far.

Here is a demonstration of placing the contact frame, paper, and negative into the UV box:

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You close that lid tightly, and flip a switch on the side to get the exposure rolling. You can actually TURN OF THE LIGHT SWITCH, open one side of the contact frame to keep the negative in exactly the same place, and view the image on the paper as it’s beginning to emerge. You’re supposed to develop when you see a “whisper of and image.” I’ve yet to determine what exactly makes the best whisper. This is really an art.

After exposure, you remove the paper in low incandescent light, and put it into a very dry and very clean tray used only for pt/pl developing. You take the developer and quickly, evenly dump it onto the paper and agitate. As mentioned above, you will actually see the image faintly on the paper even before wet development begins. The image pops up almost instantly in the developer and then the print is ready to be cleared in three 5 minute EDTA baths. Finally, give a 30 minute wash in running water follows. Evaluate and hang up to dry. Some darkening will occur as a result of the dry down effect.

Here are some early pieces:

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You can see where my emulsion was coated on the borders; messy, but it DOES look handmade!

This is not for the faint-hearted, but is a great rollback even past film and the usual silver halide black and white process. These are among the most archival prints made and will last as long as the paper they’re printed on.

 

 

 

Brazos Bend State Park

10 Sunday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Digital Photography, nature, Travel, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

brazos bend state park, Digital Photography, sigma 150-600 for nikon, super telephoto zoom lens, texas, texas wildlife, wildlife

This is a great state park in Texas just about 30 minutes south of Houston. It features alligators and a nice variety of bird life.

Camera was a Nikon D7100 and the lens a Sigma 150- 600, effectively with the crop a 225 – 900. It is a large lens, of course, and it is even suggested that a monopod is the minimum support requirement. However, use a high enough ISO and shutter speed and that impediment to quick response to wildlife subjects (the monopod) can be fairly well avoided.

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The shallow depth of field of a super telephoto allowed me to give sharp focus to the end of the snout and its reflection while making a pleasant blur in the other areas.

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While the alligator looks sluggish, it’s said that they can dart out of the water fairly quickly to seize its victim (or camera-wielding tormentor). I wouldn’t have done this with a 50mm lens! He or she seems somewhat perturbed.

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Now on the nicer side, a gallinule calmly graces the ripples with its vibrant beak looking like a corn candy.

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Here is a group of gallinules in the fen.

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The American bittern stalks its unwary fare.

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Maw and Paw blue-winged teal rest on the lounge log.

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I did shoot some black and white with a Fuji GA something or other 6 x 4.5 film camera, but here is a quickie digital rendition.

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The ibis prepares to pounce.

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The lazy gator a log mounts.

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Gallinule walks the branch.

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Double crested cormorant.

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Gallinule and cormorant.

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Great blue heron surveys his or her domain.

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Ibis shows off for the gallinules. They are common, after all.

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A herd of ibis feeds.

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Ibis herd, another view.

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Three ibises.

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Common grebe.

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More gallinule action.

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Common egret I.

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Common egret II.

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Common egret three, frazzled.

The Sigma 150-600 is a reasonable solution to the common wildlife photographer who’d like to “get out there” a little further!

 

 

 

Pretty Sharp, but Not Pretty!

07 Thursday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Digital Photography, Uncategorized

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editing, over sharpening, over sharpening photos, photo editing, sharpening photos

Today I went into my website and replaced about a dozen photos of Big Bend that I took and edited about 6 years ago when I proceeded according to the philosophy, “If a little of something is good, then a whole lot of it is even BETTER!”

An easy thing to do is over sharpen a file. We hear about sharp lenses that produce sharp images and that is good; so, why not help the lens out a lit… a lot in the editing software and make what’s already sharp even sharper?

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This is a normal file sharpened in camera only…actually, not at all since it’s from the RAW.

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Same file, grossly over sharpened. To me it looks pixellated, like a photo with the large dots in a newspaper.

Take care when sharpening. In Lightroom, use the mask to return smoother portions of the picture to the original sharpness or unsharpness, as you will!

 

Fill’ Em

06 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Film Cameras, film photography, nature, Uncategorized

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"photography", black and white, black and white film, film, film camera, film photography, hasselblad, medium format photography

I’m posting twice today to make up for all the past and future days I won’t be bored enough to do this. Speaking of bored, some poor soul was ennui-afflicted enough yesterday to do 45 views of this blog. My heart goes out to you.

Yes, it’s a gloomy day here in Astro City by gulf, so this is my cure for the doldrums. Today I will dip my beak into the fill’ em well again. I shot some fill’ em in a Hasselblad 501 CM this past week, out in east Texas. It’s a fun experience to do what I haven’t done in so long.

The chance being pretty good you don’t know what a Hasselblad is, here’s a picture of an old HB 500 CM which I also own:

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Here it is in Houston. Speaking of Houston, a motorized version, the 500 ELM was taken on lunar missions. Not a version of Houston, but of this camera. It was used to take that famous photo of the earth rising on the moon’s horizon. They just left the Hassies there. Too heavy for lift off from the lunar surface.

This used to be a prohibitively expensive camera for the average person. I worked a night job to pay for mine back in the ’80’s. Now they’re fairly low priced on that auction site.

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Here are some of my negatives on the light table with a large blueberry next to one of them for scale. I should have put a 35mm negative there too for side by side comparison, but I didn’t think of it at the time. If you smushed the blueberry it might be comparable. These negatives were processed by my little ol’ self and they measure 6 x 6 centimeters or 2 and a 1/4 inches square as we say in Mission Control. They enlarge quite nicely. Look very closely under the words KODAK 100TMX and see the distinctive Hasselblad signature upside-down V’s. They identify these pictures as having been taken by a Hasselblad. I think they may stand for Victor since Victor Hasselblad was the camera’s developer.

The blueberry did not survive this session, I’m unhappy to report.

Now I will show you how to load film into a Hasselblad A12 fill’ em magazine:

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This is your unopened roll of 120 format fill’ em, also called “roll fill’ em. IMG_4612

When it comes out of its pouch the band you see already removed entirely is wrapped around the roll like a jaundiced python. You must tear the band (I use a fingernail) and peel it away from the roll…..ENTIRELY!

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You remove the fill’ em assembly from the magazine.

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Here it is ready to receive the new fill’ em. I will take the old roll’s spool off from the left side in the photo and place into the take up spool’s position on the right side and close the latch on it. Note the knurled winding mechanism. That’s how the fill’ em will be advanced to the take up spool the required amount before loading fill’ em into the magazine and making it light fast.

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I have begun to move the fill’ em over to the take up spool. It must pass under the aluminum clip to help keep it flat and in place.

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Here fill’ em paper leader is about to be inserted into take spool slot.

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Fill’ em is being advanced until you see…….

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The black arrow on the paper line up with the read arrow (or V, whatever you fancy) on the feeder spool latch.

IMG_4619Fill’ em is now placed into the magazine so it can be safely advanced up to frame 1.

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This is the little handle that does the fill’ em cranking. Note 0 showing in the window.

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Pardon my blur, but I don’t want to reshoot. 1 is now appearing and you’re ready to take those great photos.

And now for a few of the photos taken recently:

Three Trees and Shed 2

Hayrolls 1

Dogwood and Forest 4

These were in east Texas. Last is of some dogwood in a pine forest near Palestine.

The camera has no built in meter. I used a Pentax 1 degree spot meter and based exposures on the shadow areas.

I hope you will explore the possibilities of medium format fill’ em photography!

 

 

 

 

Deep Ellum

06 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by castl23 in "photography", Digital Photography, Travel, Uncategorized

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Tags

dallas, deep ellum, iphone, iPhone photography, iphoneography, urban

Last week I was pleased to take a long bicycle ride with my wife from Dallas White Rock Lake (marathon fame) to Deep Ellum in downtown Dallas. “Ellum” is a quaint pronunciation of Elm, as in Street. This place has a lot of eateries, clubs, bars, performing artist venues, wall art adorning the buildings (Neiman Marcus version of graffiti if you will) and believe me, I wouldn’t be caught dead there at night.

First, for some iPhone pictures on the way to DE along the SF Trail. (SF means “Santa Fe.”)

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This was on the way to DE, as stated. I don’t know what it means, so if it’s objectionable, I apologize. Just pretend it’s the 23rd Psalm or something.

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This was on way to DE also. Again, I’m not sure what the author meant, but I liked the hoop that looks like someone did a major slam dunk on it, the textures and the shadows here. Well done, iPhone.

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I forget what they call this place, but here’s a sign.

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Here’s an interesting piece of artwork outside a piano-themed establishment. There are several of them in different poses.

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These are probably some well-known DE performers.

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Again, think 23rd Psalm….

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I tried to be abstract.

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This is a bonus picture. It’s actually in Houston, but it seems to fit the theme here.

I hope you liked my pictures I took in Deep Ellum. Thank you for looking today.

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