Archive for the ‘film’ Category

Long absence

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

So it’s been almost a month since I last posted…  I’ve been rather busy in that month, and not always in a good way.  Not necessarily bad, just too much of the work-a-day world and not enough time for my personal interests.  Hopefully that will change soon and I’ll be back to a saner work/life balance.

I meant to bring the Pentax to campus today to wander around at lunch, but I was still feeling groggy when I left for the bus and forgot to take it along.  I did manage to get the film developed and scanned from the last time it came to campus, though, and some of the images look really nice.

I started my walkabout as I usually do, by coming up through the Hospitals employee parking deck and then through the med school to Columbia.  Here’s a shot of the old trailer that was torn down to make room for the new Imaging Research building that they’re getting ready to start on:

Trailer A goes away

Trailer A goes away

This was taken from the glass-enclosed pedestrian bridge, so you can see a bit of reflection from the glass.

This shot was taken from the corner of Columbia and South.  The sign says it’s the ROTC Armory, but the building is the Fred Brroks addition to Sitterson, the computer science building.  The armory is the building peeking out of the right edge of the image.

Fred P Brooks Building

Fred P Brooks Building

I’ve got more available, but I’ll post them later.  For now, I need to get back to the day job.

Two-fisted shooting

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

Had a shoot with Rebecca Lawrence today – I’ve worked with her before, and she’s got to be one of the most experienced models I’ve ever been able to work with.  Both times I shot with her, I felt like my game suddenly got elevated to the next level, which given the way I usually improve slowly and incrementally is highly unusual.  We did a little bit of standing portraiture and some lingerie, then we went out to Jordan Lake for some outdoor shots.  What we ended up with are some of the best images I’ve taken to date, even before the cropping and color correcting that will undoubtedly be needed.  I was shooting both digital and film outdoors – 50mm f/1.4 Nikkor on the D70 digital, and a 75mm f/2.8 on the Pentax medium format.  The film was 400 speed Tri-X Pan from Kodak, most of my outdoor frames are f/16 at a shutter speed of 1/500 or 1/250 sec.  The digitals are mostly wider aperture, roughly the same shutter speed, but at a 200 speed setting.

I have a shoot tomorrow with Angelique Kithos, and I’m going to try to take her to the same spot – the water was about 75 degrees and there was barely a cloud in the sky all day.  Gorgeous weather for sightseeing, but tomorrow should have scattered clouds, which is even more ideal for photography than clear skies.  Next weekend I’m going to relax and not do any shooting, since I’m kind of swamped between work, class and shoots right now; I need the downtime.  I also need to get off my tookus and prep the next SCG update – I’m about a week and a half behind already, but in all honesty, shooting and getting classwork (and homework) done is a higher priority.

In other news, next week (starting Monday, two days from now), I start trying to bike in to work as often as possible – I’ve been meaning to do that for two weeks now and either my schedule or the weather ha gotten in my way, but it looks like Monday will be perfect to start that habit.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have some film that’s begging me to put it on a spool and soak it in some chemicals.  :)

Off to the races

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

I’ve got a shoot at 1pm today, so in the meantime I figured I’d try to get Daisy’s film scanned, since it’s been hanging up “drying” for three days now.  I think it’s dry by now…  As I suspected, the first 12 exposures or so were completely unrecoverable – *severely* underexposed when shot, mostly because I hadn’t been paying as close attention to the camera settings as I should have.  Fortunately, I realized this halfway through the roll and was able to make adjustments.  This was the first shoot I did with my “new” lighting setup, and I was (and still am) thoroughly impressed with how much better the images look versus my old way.  Honestly, I still prefer daylight, but for some images, shooting outdoors is just no kosher (IMHO).  Here’s a sample from the recent scans, untouched by Photoshop:

Southern Comfort Times Two

Southern Comfort Times Two

Moving along…

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Finally got the last of Kristen’s film scanned.  The indoor images are way off-balance, so I only scanned four or five of them total – matter of fact, I left an entire roll unscanned because of it.  I just didn’t have my shit together on lighting when I did that shoot, and it showed.  The outdoor shots were great – natural lighting is awesome – the indoor shots on film ended up the next best thing to complete crap.  I’m so glad I’ve gotten my shit together since then…  also, the fact that I’m only using B&W film anymore really helps.  I’ve got a roll of Daisy’s to scan, and then two rolls of Stephanie’s to develop and scan – all C-41 – then three rolls of 320TXP from my lunch walkabout on campus a week or two ago.  Feel free to take a look at the new images at the end of Kristen’s full album (all images in that album untouched by Photoshop so don’t whine about the temperature or color distribution wonkiness).

New film!

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Just got the first film shipment I bought on eBay – 21 rolls of 400 ISO Tri-X B&W 120 film.  Can’t wait to start putting it through the camera!

Why am I awake?

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Well, this is an absolutely ridiculous time for me to be posting.  I should be asleep.  I tried to go to sleep about 2 hours ago and couldn’t.  I thought I was tired…  I felt tired…  now I just feel kind of blah.

Unfortunately, I haven’t had any time to develop and scan in my film backlog, so it’s still sitting there, looking at me, making me feel guilty for procrastinating.  I really want to get those recent UNC images scanned, too!  Gah…  I’ll have to try and do this tomorrow – or at least start on it – I think once I manage to get myself started, I’ll be able to finish it up fairly rapidly.  6 rolls of C41 to process, three rolls of 320TXP.

In the meantime, I thought I’d pull out an old black and white scan of campus – this taken on Kodak Tmax 400 film in a Nikon N80QD with a 50mm f/1.2 lens set at about f/2, if I recall correctly.

The Pit

The Pit

This is a view of the Pit and Student Stores circa 2004 as seen from an area between Lenior Dining Hall and Greenlaw Hall.

Film explorations

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

I mentioned in a few posts about my day job, and how much I enjoy it – one of the reasons I enjoy it so much is the flexibility I have to take long lunches.  I did so today just before class, and got two rolls worth of film on just the direct route from my office to Subway and back to my class building.  Yes, it’s film so I don’t have anything to show you yet, but this is the start of that “sights of UNC” project I was thinking about a while back – a black and white film perspective of the UNC Chapel Hill campus and the changing seasons thereof.  Of course, I’m backlogged on developing by about 6 rolls, before the two I shot today…  heh.  Maybe I should develop some film tonight, you think?

Coming up for breath…

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

It’s been a while since my last post – I’ve been busier than anything with my job and with the class I’m taking.  Fortunately, the class is going really well – I’m doing better than I expected to be doing, even if I’m not doing quite as well as I really want to be doing.  It’s amazing how much adjustment there is in going back to school, even part-time – heck, even just one class per semester as a benefit of working for a University – after over 12 years of being out.  I’ve got a lot of advantages over the regular undergrad students I’m in classes with (I’m using undergrad classes to prove I have the mojo to take on a few grad classes which I’ll use to get into grad school), but what I didn’t expect was just how many disadvantages I have.

But that’s neither here nor there – the class is going well, and I’m really enjoying it, but this blog is about photography, not classwork or my job or other uninteresting stuff.  Last weekend I updates SCG with Savannah’s shoot – Savannah is a wonderful model, with more experience in her big toe than I have in total, and you can tell she definitely knows what poses make for good images.  Here’s one that I especially like:

Sleeper

Sleeper

The weather was absolutely piss-poor when we shot together, so I couldn’t get any nice outdoor shots, and I still haven’t figured everything on the Pentax out to get higher quality indoor film B&W shots, so no film from Savannah’s shoot.

But I did finish scanning in the B&W from Stephanie’s shoot, and some of those images are (IMHO) absolutely gorgeous.  Here’s just one example:

Zoom?  ZOOM!

Zoom? ZOOM!

The small image here looks good, but it loses the graininess of the full-size scan, which is what I really like about these images.  Maybe I’m a throwback, but damn I like the effects of grain I’ve been getting from this film!

More film!

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

Just finished converting some raw film scans through Photoshop.  These are from the shoot I did with Kelli Vicious – the film was Kodak 400TX this time (as opposed 320TXP for Nicole’s shoot), the developer was still Ilford Ilfotec DDX.  Notice the contrastiness of the image as a whole, yet it doesn’t break down into hard outlines:

The Sign

The Sign

My second roll came out even more boldly differentiated – much contrastier.  I think that was partly due to the changes I made in exposure settings (mostly apeture):

Doorway

Doorway

And a final example:

Woodpile

Woodpile

New scans!

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

So I finally got my entire film workflow set back up a few nights ago and I’ve been developing and scanning negatives in a mad rush.  The part that took the longest was finding decent scanning software – Epson makes great scanners, but their software is rather broken.  I finally discovered that Mac OS X’s Image Capture utility does exactly what I need it to, then I hand off to Photoshop for conversion and rendering (just like I do with digital camera files).

So the negatives I have scanned in now are from the shoot I did with Nicole Marie a month or so ago.  I used Kodak 320TXP film in a Pentax 645 medium format camera, developed in Ilford Iflotec DDX developer.  Here’s one example:

Sitting Pretty

Sitting Pretty

I still love the feel of film.  The image looks so much more natural and realistic to me somehow than the digital images.  I did have some unintentional developing issues, I think because it’s been so long since I’ve done true black and white film development and I wasn’t paying as close attention as I should have.  Some of them gave my negatives some effects which I thought were really cool – it gave them a very “old-timey” feel – vintage photographs, deteriorating but salvageable negatives from days gone by.  Here’s an example of the effect I’m talking about:

Smile

Smile

Notice the graininess over the whole image, the fading at the top and bottom of the image  it’s just really cool, IMHO.

More images yet to scan, and more rolls of film yet to develop…  Back later!