Hello, this is my intro.
I'm crawling out of the advertising woodwork to add my bit on LF photography. There was another side to LF. Forget Yellowstone, great names and cherry-wood. In the beginning there was the process printer. He had to take your transparency, mask it, shoot the separations, mask again (in register) and contact print the plates. Better 8x10 than 6x6. So advertising campaigns were shot on 8x10
In the sixties, where I began, the ad agencies, JWT, McCann, Y&R, Ogilvy and others bought their way into Europe. Food and soap powder which previously was sold out of the sack by weight was starting to be sold in boxes with brand names. Ok, I am generalising, but here goes. The agencies came in with english-speaking Creative Directors who liked things done the way things were done in NY and London. Things were done on 8x10. It kind of separated the men from the boys.
The agencies had another reason for requiring 8x10 - the all-important Client Presentation. Again, forget definition, tonal range, art. The transparency was mounted in a large black passpartout and held up to the window by an Account Executive. It had prestige. Anything smaller than 8x10 couldn't make it. Sometimes the trannies were sent off to London to make dye-transfers for retouching and more was spent on post-production than on the shoot.
An Art Director wouldn't look at your portfolio if it wasn't in 8x10. When he did look, he held the trannies up to the window too. (ADs did use a light box; after the shoot, with a loupe, for nit-picking) In forty years I never got to shoot a colour negative. The system started to colapse in the eighties when Art Kane turned up with 35mm kodachromes.
So the first step to becoming a photographer in advertising was getting the big camera and the gear to hold it up: big head, big tripod, big lens and big lights. Happily there was no big polaroid in those days. Polaroid is for nit-pickers.
Despite David Ogilvy, it became the fashion in the 70's to position headline, body-copy and pack-shot inside the photograph itself. When the art-director had his way, his layout was sketched onto the ground-glass with a grease pencil. It was then left to the photographer to fill in the empty spaces with subject matter. That often involved a good deal of shift (needed a monorail) and acres of background. Even on location the set might be lit for white headlines over black body-copy.
Getting back to gear. My first camera was a Burke & James which needed two tripods to keep it steady (the 300mm lens was also a mistake). Steadiness was vital because the shutter was always on bulb and the lens stopped right down. At f45 you barely get focus on a bottle and the plate of food in front of it.
Forget the 'Depth of Field Scheimpflug Calculator' - nothing in advertising is on one plane alone - there is always a vertical and a horizontal and a compromise. We bent (compromised) all subject matter to fit within the limitations of 8x10. The format is about right for cars and unbeatable on location with plenty of distance, but we shot everything, from watches to ballrooms in 8x10.
I've sat in the dark triggering flash sixty-four times to reach f45. Vibration from passing trams was a problem. We were doing "Natural Light" in the seventies and my window-light was eating up four stops. If you, the reader, are thinking tungsten, think of reciprocity, drooping vegetables, melting margarine, buckling persplex and packs of cc filters. Now I can afford 20,000ws of flash in a 2x3 window-light which givs me one bang at f.64 - nice for shooting steaming coffee. But it is too late, digital has spoilt the fun.
4x5 was for pack-shots, the products at the bottom of the page next to the body-copy. Product Managers would grumble at the small size and produce a loupe to check the label (yes, they carried a loupe to presentations).
Then there was 5x7, 13x18cm over here. It was like there was some sort of class prejudice. 13x18 was for commercial photography, furniture, kitchen catalogs. They shot negative colour film and sold prints for salesman portfolios. 8x10 and 4x5 was ok, 13x18 was not ok. We would have been a bit ashamed to bring a 13x18 into an agency.
Things change and I grew up. I tried a Technika 13x18 in 1982 and thought what the hell and never looked back. For the next two decades I made a career out of 13x18, doing traditional still-life - my way, orthogonal and all in focus. The format is a perfect match for table-top. 13x18 got me a couple of Art Directors Club golds and a Clio. I didn't need more than limited movement and an 180mm lens. Also - no polaroid, no problem. The Linhof was too heavy to carry around outdoors so I build a half-plate box for landscape. See it here: http://web.mac.com/cjbroadbent/Site/fivebyseven.html
My humble advice to first-time large-formatters is - You don't need big contortions. You do need to be sure the front end is square on. (Have a look at a 'Non Folding Field Camera'). Use just one lens, no longer than the width of the film. Get the back-end plumb square, raise and drop the front at will, but tilt it hardly at all. Scheimpflug is for the birds.
Things change and I've grown up still more, and now I want things simpler. So I'm back to using 8x10 (Gandolfi) because it's big enough to contact print and I'm thinking definition, tonal range, art. It's a creative choice. All the rest is digital.
Bookmarks