Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...38271e626d.jpg
My wife... the perfect assistant, looking over a composition of one do the Atget frames. Our day at Versailles was overshadowed by impressive heat, 97 degrees made it very difficult to work with a clean mind.
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Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
This is fantastic! One of the best threads I've seen on here. Really, really great work and thank you for sharing it with us. I love having the BTS mixed in as well.
Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
I believe Atget used the whole plate format???
Anyways... years ago put together a book for our town's museum titled "Collinsville then and now". Used old images made by our town's photographer, Charles Harrington, from around 1890 to 1910. 99% of time he used a 5x7 camera to shoot his glass plates. I initially used a digital camera to capture today's images in color. Several times was able to borrow a 5x7 camera to take the present day images. The experience was totally lost using a FX digital camera to take the present day color images verses using a 5x7. Biggest difference was the relative "height" of the ground from where the initial shots were taken. We have Harrington's tripod in the museum, and his camera's height was a constant 5 feet plus a few inches. Shooting from the same spots where he took his photographs... well the present day ground level varied by several feet in some cases. Even the road level at times changed by a foot or two. Today's roads seem to be much lower that the same roads were around 1900, I postulate for water drainage purposes.
He did shoot a few 8x10 glass plates using an ultra WA lens. Used my 8x10 with a 120mm WA Nikkor to try to duplicate his images, and the lens that he used had to be around 90-100mm... have no idea of what that ultra WA optic was.
Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Greg
I believe Atget used the whole plate format???
Anyways... years ago put together a book for our town's museum titled "Collinsville then and now". Used old images made by our town's photographer, Charles Harrington, from around 1890 to 1910. 99% of time he used a 5x7 camera to shoot his glass plates. I initially used a digital camera to capture today's images in color. Several times was able to borrow a 5x7 camera to take the present day images. The experience was totally lost using a FX digital camera to take the present day color images verses using a 5x7. Biggest difference was the relative "height" of the ground from where the initial shots were taken. We have Harrington's tripod in the museum, and his camera's height was a constant 5 feet plus a few inches. Shooting from the same spots where he took his photographs... well the present day ground level varied by several feet in some cases. Even the road level at times changed by a foot or two. Today's roads seem to be much lower that the same roads were around 1900, I postulate for water drainage purposes.
He did shoot a few 8x10 glass plates using an ultra WA lens. Used my 8x10 with a 120mm WA Nikkor to try to duplicate his images, and the lens that he used had to be around 90-100mm... have no idea of what that ultra WA optic was.
Whole plate, 8x10... close enough [emoji3]
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Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
Atget used an 18x24cm camera, not a 20x25 (8x10").
According to Berenice Abbott, he had a "trousse" containing convertible lenses.
He printed on albumen POP paper, then gold toned, a process I tried to duplicate for my own series.
PS: please forgive my rusty English!
Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Philippe Grunchec
Atget used an 18x24cm camera, not a 20x25 (8x10").
According to Berenice about, he had a "trousse" containing convertible lenses.
He printed on albumen POP paper, then gold toned, a process I tried to duplicate for my own series.
PS: please forgive my rusty English!
Those details really didn’t concern me. The work is conversation with Atget, not an exercise in recreating and mimicking every detail
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Re: In the Footsteps of Atget
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dodphotography
Whole plate, 8x10... close enough [emoji3]
damn close...
____________
Following the steps of a master in that way it is a great opportunity to understand his work and his mind, and anyway it's a nice tribute to such an artist.