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View Full Version : Tips & Tricks for Large Format Portraiture?



neil poulsen
10-Apr-2013, 09:54
I've been thinking about giving LF portraiture a try. Pondering, it seems like the logistics aren't anything like that with smaller, more automatic cameras.

For example, in a studio setting, it seems like one would need to focus and compose the image with the aperture wide open. (It's dark in studios.) And, all of a sudden, THE MOMENT IS THERE! So . . .

>> Close the shutter.

>> Close down the aperture.

>> Put in the film holder and remove the darkslide.

Guess what -- MOMENT IS GONE.

Not to mention that the sitter might be distracted by ALL OF THIS ACTIVITY. (Forget trying to keep the sitter from seeing the shutter, to prevent them from knowing the moment of exposure.)

At least in a studio, one can have tons of light for 4x5 or 8x10.

One thought that occurred to me is that, in any setting, one could have some sort of reference point, so that the photographer could gauge whether or not the sitter had changed their position by any significant amount. (Out of the narrow plane of focus?) Perhaps this might remove the need for periodically checking the image on the g.g. That might enable the photographer to be camera-ready when that moment occurs.

I saw a contact print (of the negative) in a book of one of Arnold Newman's well-known images photographed with a 4x5 camera. The content of the final photo was actually pretty small within the negative. (He had to enlarge significantly.) Two thoughts occur to me. He captured a wider photo than needed, in case the sitter moved. The other, with a wider lens, one has a little better depth of field.

We know that large format photography is more contemplative, more introspective endeavor. One wonders if the sitter is in a similar frame of mind.

Anyway, all of these meanderings lead me to ask, what are the tips an tricks of large format portraiture? How can one obtain a good photograph of a person, yet still manage the logistics of a large format camera?

vinny
10-Apr-2013, 09:56
clamp the subjects head in a vise. that way they won't be out of focus.

DrTang
10-Apr-2013, 10:28
clamp the subjects head in a vise. that way they won't be out of focus.

when I was doing lens tests using my teenage kid as a subject..I constructed a reference head rest using a lightstand and a couple of the various lighting clamps I have collected. I'd focus wide open with her head against the rest ..then fiddle with the stops and film holder and such and she danced around or whatever it is kids do.. and then she could get back in front of the camera and gently rest her head on the (extra large wood wood drawer pull as it turned out) and presto - in focus


If I had an assistant..I would probably focus on the subject..have the assistant measure it off using a string tied to the tripod say.. fiddle with the equipment..and when ready..get the sitter to pose as the ass't makes sure the distance is the same


not having an assistant.. I just tell the subject to: hold still

ShawnHoke
10-Apr-2013, 11:01
I've been shooting some 8x10 portraits at f22 and 1/4 of a second lately with my measly one light setup. It's tricky, but I just explain the process to the sitter and do a dry run. It helps them to know what's going on. And lots of "Okay, hold still." "Don't move."

David Aimone
10-Apr-2013, 11:28
That's what I do, and I often take my time just to make sure I don't mess anything up!

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8384/8610691115_9ccce272a1_n.jpg


I've been shooting some 8x10 portraits at f22 and 1/4 of a second lately with my measly one light setup. It's tricky, but I just explain the process to the sitter and do a dry run. It helps them to know what's going on. And lots of "Okay, hold still." "Don't move."

JRCriton
11-May-2013, 09:28
That's what I do, and I often take my time just to make sure I don't mess anything up!

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8384/8610691115_9ccce272a1_n.jpg

Very beautiful lighting and photograph.

Will Frostmill
11-May-2013, 11:52
Neil,
I had heard a while back that the straightforward way to do it was set up at the working aperture, measure the distance to the plane (point!) of best focus, and tie a length of string to the camera that ends at that point. Pull the darkslide. When your subject comes in, have them hold the end of the string to their nose, and when you (or they) are ready, drop the string and click. Out of courtesy to the model, keep the studio floor clean. :)

Alternatively, look up the Kalart Focuspot. Same idea, but uses a rangefinder to project two beams of light. When they touch, you're in focus. Many press cameras had them built in. If I was going to do handheld studio work and had a high powered studio flash system, I would totally use a Speed Graphic with one of these. (I actually bought one off of that auction site years ago and never got around to mounting it on anything. )

Will

lenser
11-May-2013, 12:29
Especially for children. Take subject out of shoes, nail shoes to floor, put subject back in shoes and proceed. Not my idea....I heard someone seriously postulate this at a convention one time.

lenser
11-May-2013, 12:32
In all seriousness, I have simply become a human metronome by counting aloud for the subject to know how long to hold the pose. Often I will pair that with holding my hand close to the lens and counting off the fingers for them to follow.

Maris Rusis
11-May-2013, 14:30
Here's an account I wrote a while ago:

Yesterday I shot six full face portraits with a Tachihara 810HD view camera and the process went smoothly because almost all the work had been done before the sitter arrived.

I used a stand-in seated in a posing chair to set exact focus. Then I ran a string ending in a small bead from the camera to the stand-in. String length was adjusted so that when the bead was between the subjects eyes and the string was taut the subjects eyes are in exact focus. Camera focus was then locked down because the string and bead would guarantee image focus and I would not have to look again at the ground glass or get under a focussing cloth.

Then I checked light meter readings, adjusted for bellows extension, set the aperture, the shutter speed, and cocked the shutter. Since the session was only going to take a few minutes and my sunny-day light wasn't going to change I would not have to meter again.

Next a film holder was put into the camera and the darkslide was pulled.

Finally the sitter arrived, took their place in the chair, did the bead and string routine, held their head still, dropped the bead, turned their eyes to the lens, and I fired the shutter with a long cable release.

The fastest portrait in photography comes from a preset view camera with a big sheet of film waiting in the darkness behind the lens - but only for the first shot!

After that there is a bit of work: changing film holders, cocking and firing the shutter, and bantering with the sitter until the end of the session. I'm in control because the string and bead delivers focus, the light is constant, the sitter's chair stops them wandering out of frame, and the long cable release lets me fire the shutter with my hand behind my back. The sitter doesn't know when to flinch.

John Kasaian
11-May-2013, 20:44
Keeping a good sense of humor helps.