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Thursday, August 15, 2013

Variation On The Same



 
In this space I have written a few times on the ramifications of taking several photographs of the same subject with similar but different cameras.
  
It was a couple of years ago where I found myself one late afternoon on the Grand Canyon’s North Rim with my wife and two granddaughters. The light was fading fast. Next to me was a young man with an expensive, zoom-lens-equipped Canon Digital Single Lens Reflex Camera.

I had several bags and I had with me:

1. Three Nikon FM-2 cameras.

2. One Pentax MX with a wonderfully corrected 20mm lens.

3. One Mamiya RB-67 Pro SD with three backs for three different films.

4. One 2¼ inch by 7 inch negative/slide Noblex swivel lens panoramic.

The young man glanced in my direction and must have thought I was completely crazy.

The idea probably going in his head is that any one image he shot with his Canon in the RAW format could be converted to b+w and could then be manipulated to resemble and old photograph, a high contrast one, a low contrast one, one with super-saturated colours and so on.

For me to replicate that I had to choose a camera and select film for the purpose. I had to use whatever lens I thought I needed while the young man could simply zoom.

I am a few days from getting my Fuji X-E1 with an 18 to 55 mm zoom (equivalent to 27 to 84mm in the 35mm film format). I am wondering how this camera  might destroy or modify my idea that several images taken with different cameras in which a pause might happen as you pick up a different camera and or insert a different lens. Since I mostly photograph people, they might move and if my camera is not on a tripod (and this is the case when I use my 35mm cameras) the angle of view will be different. Is this good? Something in me tells me this is a good idea but I cannot prove it.

Illustrating this blog are four pictures of Lauren taken a month ago on my living room psychiatric couch. I used and RB-67 Pro SD and a 90 mm lens. One strip (two side by side transparencies scanned together) was with Fuji Provia 100 ISO slide film. The other strip was with Ilford FP-4 100 ISO black and white film. What might you think?