Has anyone else been watching this project? The camera is on display in Chicago tell the end of October.How does one obtain such large film ??
https://www.facebook.com/Butterflies...Culture?ref=hl
Has anyone else been watching this project? The camera is on display in Chicago tell the end of October.How does one obtain such large film ??
https://www.facebook.com/Butterflies...Culture?ref=hl
I suspect the photo is a digital composite.
He's that way, methinks.
But anyway, more here: http://butterfliesandbuffalo.com/dennis-manarchy/
Really? How could you tell?I suspect the photo is a digital composite.
He's that way, methinks.
Thanks,
Kirk
at age 73:
"The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep"
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His photographic style doesn't particularly appeal to me, and there are already several people out there turning vans or trucks into camera obscuras; but I gotta commend the effort of building an actual vintage-looking mega-camera. Even if it's a gimmick, it sure can't do any harm to the reputation of LF film photography.
Now let's see someone build a ballhead for this thing!
Here is a article,check out the size of that neg..
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/bu...erican-culture
I agree im not a big fan of his style either,but i do like the vintage look of the camera.
There was actually a camera this big used on the real frontier, ca 1880's, but I can't remember if the technique was tintype or whatever. Each shot required about a week of carpentry to build the support scaffolding, and a crew of assistants to apply the emulsion etc. The shots would be of an entire group of Indians, etc. Probably none of the negs have survived, but with some sleuthing, one can locate remaining photos of the camera setup itself. The record size for any photograph
was recently made by turning the inside of the Moffett Field blimp hanger into a camera obscura, and applying Liquid Light, then dev and fixer with huge industrial
paint rollers (a project involving about twenty students). ... the result was a big uneven canvas mural of some very boring aircraft runways and ugly commercial
warehousing off in the distance. But what the heck. But in the case being specifically discussed on the thread, the object of art, or conversation piece itself,
might well be the camera. I don't see anything particular compelling about yet another Avedon-style white-sheet point-blank tour of the West, just biggggger.
This guy is very marketing savy. This project is like a huge flashing billboard in the media pointing directly at him. Bigggggger gets big press even if it is superfluous really to the imagery. Gotta admire his business sense.
But does the camera even exist yet in its portable version? Everything I have seen outside of his studio is CG of some sort and the portraits he shows seem to be studio shots.
Thanks,
Kirk
at age 73:
"The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep"
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