Category Archives: Lenses

Custom work – Mounting a Hermagis Eidoscope

Here are two photos of the Hermagis Eidoscope #5 mounted on my Canham. The Hermagis is on loan to me from the Washington School of Photography. Mounting it on my camera required multiple customizations. First, I had to have the front standard on the Canham swapped out, as the original one was made to handle Linhof lensboards. The Linhof Technika board is just a little too small to take the flange for the lens. Fortunately, the Canham design will accommodate the larger Toyo 110×110 mm board, and now comes standard in that format.

I called Keith Canham and spoke with him about this. One of the great things about calling Keith is that when you call to discuss a problem, he answers the phone himself. You speak directly with the man who built your camera! He suggested that I pull the front standard off the camera, ship it to him, and he would re-use the hardware on a new wood panel the required size. I followed his instructions and popped it in Priority Mail. I had the new panel with all the hardware installed plus the original should I ever want to convert it back in my hot little hands within four days. Talk about customer service!! This is why I will be a loyal Canham customer as long as they remain in business.

I took the Toyo lensboard out to my folks’ place where I have my drill press and, after hunting around a bit to find the proper tools, drilled the hole in the lens board that would let the flange fit. Typically, I slightly oversized the hole, but not so big it caused any problems. I’d wish for a laser lathe but I don’t do this kind of stuff often enough to justify such a thing. For now I’ll live with my cheap Ryobi drill press and my variable diameter circle cutter.

In addition to mounting the lens, I made a lens cap from the cardboard insert that came in a package of Bergger VCCB fiber paper. The lens cap top was traced from the lens hood then cut out with an Xacto blade. The edge was made from a strip of the same board bent into a tube. There was a small gap in the side of the tube because it was too short, but that worked out to my advantage- otherwise the cap would have been too tight and therefore too hard to take off and put on efficiently. The tube is attached to the body with black bookbinder’s tape, the same tape I use for repairing hinges on light traps for film holders.

I’ll be using the lens cap as a shutter for now, until I get around to making a mount for a Packard shutter. You can see the lens cap in the first picture, on the lens.

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More from the Helios 85mm f1.5

A few more from the Helios 85mm lens. I’m impressed, what about you? That razor-thin depth of field wide open is tricky to manage, but I think it transitions nicely between sharp and out of focus.

Frosty is one of my two cats. He’s the more wiggly of the two, actually, so it’s a challenge to get him to pose. Chub-Chub will sit still longer, until he realizes the camera is pointed at him, and then he has to come look at the lens.

Frosty
Frosty

This is my friend Missy, wife of my best friend Steve. This was a grab shot at their Super Bowl party. She just lights up when she smiles.

Missy
Missy

Richard is another friend – also photographed at Steve and Missy’s Super Bowl party.

Richard
Richard

New Lens – Zenit Helios 85mm f1.5 for Canon EOS

I got a new lens yesterday – a Zenit Helios 85mm f1.5 in Canon EOS mount. The Helios is a Russian made lens. It’s a strange anachronism – solid brass barrel, pre-set aperture (which is the weirdest thing I’ve ever dealt with), but multi-coated glass. If you’ve never used a lens with a pre-set aperture, here’s how it works – you set the aperture you want to use. The lens remains open to its widest aperture for focusing. When you are ready to expose, you turn the stop-down ring to close the aperture, then take the picture. I have yet to decide if this is worth the trouble.

If it’s such a pain to use, you ask, then why did I ever buy such a beast? For several reasons. One, it was only slightly more expensive than the Canon 85mm f1.8 lens, and dramatically cheaper than the Canon 85mm f1.2 L lens. I got the extra half-stop of speed for about $50 more. Second, the lens is famous (infamous depending on who you ask) for producing a “swirly” background when shot at large apertures. I wanted something that would give a Petzval-esque look but would be more modern in function. As to more modern in function, well, read my comments above. It does have an internal aperture at least, and doesn’t require waterhouse stops, but other than that, it’s not exactly modern in function. 1950s-era Soviet technology at its finest.

But how do its images look? That’s the most important thing. Well, here are some examples I shot last night.

This is my friend Thi – we went to see a movie, and I dragged along the lens and camera to take some test photos outside the theater. Thi is always a bit of a sourpuss, and not terribly fond of being photographed, so you’ll pardon his expression. I’m quite impressed with the lens’ rendering of color and contrast, and the overall sharpness even wide open.

Thi, at the Majestic Theater
Thi, at the Majestic Theater

But where’s the “swirl”? Wait for it, it’s coming.

Here’s the neon marquee outside the theater. Again, terrific rendering of the marquee’s intense colors.

Majestic Marquee
Majestic Marquee

It is possible to use this lens for candid shots. I snagged this photo of the boy at Chipotle building burritos, but I didn’t have to play around with pre-setting the aperture because I was shooting wide-open anyway.

Making Burritos at Chipotle
Making Burritos at Chipotle

If it wasn’t already obvious, you can see the razor-thin depth of field at f1.5 in this shot.

Street Sign
Street Sign

I think the shallow depth of field in this shot works very well – this was observed through the window of my car while I sat at a red light. The barbershop has closed for the evening, and the barber is finishing up a last customer, when a friend pokes his head in to chat.

Barbershop, Closing
Barbershop, Closing

Another color test, also observed through the window of my car while waiting at a stop light.

We Buy Gold
We Buy Gold

Here I was playing around with selective focus and action. The weirdness at the bottom of the frame is the rear-view mirror of my car. The mirror frame itself is so out of focus it visually disappears, but what is reflected in it at the same distance away as the primary subject is also equally in focus – it’s a strange quality of focusing using mirrors.

Rear View
Rear View

And finally, we get to the swirl. Here’s my cat, Chub-Chub, on the carpet in the hall. The trick, I found to getting the swirl, is to have the subject close to the background, but the background is out-of-focus due to depth of field. Put too much distance between the subject and the background, and the swirl goes away and you just get really creamy smooth out-of-focus rendition, like what you see in the portrait of Thi.

Chub-Chub, swirly background
Chub-Chub, swirly background

Washington DC in the Snow

We had a snowstorm a couple weeks ago. I know, bad me for taking so long to getting around to developing the pictures. And I have another roll from the snowstorm to go, as part of a batch. In any case, I decided I wanted to take pictures during the snowfall, so I bundled myself up and got out and about with the Rollei. This, and rain, are perhaps the two things the Rollei is less than ideal for, because the waist-level finder does nothing to prevent snow (or rain) from falling on the focusing screen. Unless of course it’s blowing sideways, at which point you have bigger problems.

I took the camera and my Induro carbon-fiber tripod out for a short walk up the street on my way to get dinner. It’s proof of the adage about finding interesting things to photograph in your own backyard. You just have to be willing to see them.

The bikeshare is a great source of material, especially if you like repeating shapes and patterns. The bike seats both break and reinforce the pattern as they are all set to slightly different heights.

Capital Bikeshare 11th Street
Capital Bikeshare 11th Street

The Wonderland Ballroom is a neighborhood bar and grill. Until 2004, it was the Nob Hill, DC’s oldest continuously operating gay bar (opened in 1954), catering to a primarily African-American (and in the end, elderly) clientele. Now it serves a young, ethnically and sexually diverse crowd of urban hipsters. Plus ca change, as the French say – a side-effect of gentrification.

Wonderland Ballroom
Wonderland Ballroom

In a long time exposure (somewhere in the region of 30 seconds) I caught the lights of a passing city bus, under the flare of a street lamp. The awesome and dramatic flare from the street lamp is a combination of the lens on my particular camera, which is prone to strange flare artifacts when you put a light source directly in the scene pointed at the lens (due in part to some loss of coating on the front element of the lens) and the specular reflections from the falling snow. In some cases I’d find lens flare like this to be highly objectionable and would consider the shot ruined. In this case, though, I think it makes the image.

Passing Bus 11th Street
Passing Bus 11th Street

More Model Photos from Sunday’s Shoot

Too often you only see models with that vacant, fashion-model stare, or the “I’m trying to seduce you” gaze. I think it’s important to show a range of emotions in a portfolio, so potential clients can see you giving different moods.

Bo is a pretty serious guy, but he does know how to relax and laugh (but you have to catch him between official shots – otherwise he reverts back to staring directly at the camera).

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A few more from the underwear series – he looks really good in red.

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Another from the plaid shirt set. Actually, he looks good in anything! I suspect you could put him in a Soviet potato sack and he’d make it rock (although good luck trying to get him to do that – he wasn’t crazy about trying on my ex-Soviet Army surplus winter hat with the red star insignia on it).

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Here are some more candidates for the headshot –

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On this one, especially because it’s a horizontal shot, I wanted to emphasize the face, so I selected it in Photoshop and masked it out, then applied a little bit of blur to the rest, so the face pops out more, like I had used a much wider aperture (my lights are actually at times TOO powerful and it’s hard to not stop down too much).

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I really like this last one because it gives great shape and definition to his face – his previous head shot, although it was square on, was basically lit flat from directly in front, and had no contouring, so it made him look like an Asian chipmunk. He actually has a very shapely face, and I think this does him justice.

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Busy Weekend – Two Model Portfolios part 2

Sunday was my shoot with Bo. Bo is also a trainer and a bartender. I know he works VERY hard to keep the body he has but I still get jealous. Bo already had a bit of a portfolio so we were expanding his look. He needed new head shots first and foremost, so I concentrated on getting good full face images in each of the looks we did.

These are the prime candidates for head shots so far.

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See what I mean about a body to be jealous of? It’s like there’s not an ounce of fat anywhere to be found.

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Here’s body movement for you – Bo is quite good at shaping his body to give it natural visual dynamic.

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Several from the underwear series we shot.

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What I was thinking when I put Bo against a black backdrop I’ll never know, as he has jet black hair that wants to disappear into the black velvet. Keeping the hair light on the top of his head to pick it out from the background was a constant fight. But I think we got some very useable shots out of it in the end.

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For the first hundred or so shots we did, there was an issue with his forehead being much darker than the rest of his face in the photos. He’s got naturally very even skin tone but for some reason, the forehead was photographing darker than his face, which made it look like he had a sunburn, or he was wearing big ski goggles while outside that kept his eyes lighter. But as the shoot progressed, the problem went away.

For the fashion look, we did a bit of a rock-n-roll styling with a leather jacket, jeans, unlaced boots and a belt with a spinner in the buckle.

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Yes, that belt buckle actually spins.

We did another casual look with a red checkered shirt – I do have more of these but I haven’t edited through all of them yet – this was just one that popped out for the pose as well as the splash of color.

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I thought I’d play around with turning a couple of the underwear shots black-and-white. I’m not terribly fond of digital black-and-white conversions – if I’m shooting personal work, and I want black-and-white, there’s no substitute for real film. Here is the one I’m happiest with so far.

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In this case, I think the black-and-white conversion does add something to the sensuality, and it could be a nice touch to diversify his portfolio. I have even more images to edit through from this shoot – I think the grand total was 489 in three hours. This is the time you do thank god for digital.

Busy Weekend – Two Model Portfolios

Among the many things I do photographically, I shoot model portfolios. I did back-to-back shoots on Saturday and Sunday this weekend. This is one where you do shoot digital because of the volume of shots required, the usual turnaround time, and the delivery methods. It would be beyond a pain in the ass to have to get the film back from the lab, edit the shots, then scan, then edit again, then do post-production clean-up. So I brought out the Canon 5D and shot away. All images were made with either the Canon 50mm f1.4 or the Canon 135 f2 L lens. While zooms have their convenience, when you’re working in a small studio, there’s little call for something very telephoto, and you can always take a couple steps back or forward if you need.

My first model is Bucky. He’s a professional trainer at a high-end gym here in DC. The goal was to get him a decent headshot and a couple different looks to flesh out his portfolio and modeling card. I’ve got a couple prime candidates for his headshot:

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This could also be a head shot, but in a horizontal composition, for something a bit different.

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Which one do you like best? Don’t worry, I shot around 350 images of him, so there’s plenty more to choose from if these don’t cut the mustard.

Then comes the formal look. The shoot stylist pulled together a suit and tie look for him from the studio’s stock wardrobe. That was a hoot because someone had mismatched the pants with the jacket and at first, there was a size 36 waist with a 38 short jacket (that should have had a 30 inch waist pant to go with it). We were afraid he’d have to wear the pants pinned up with binder clips and gaffers’ tape, but shortly the proper pants were found and we were off to the races.

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I snagged a candid of the stylist adjusting his shirt for a series of somewhat more casual shots.

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These two are showing winter styling with a sexy twist. The first shot shows off his ability to shape his body, as well as the shape his body is in.

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This one is about giving a different mood to the same outfit.

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We also shot the obligatory underwear shoot. The underwear shots are as much about showing off a model’s ability to move and sculpt their body in poses as they are about underwear – after all, there isn’t very much to underwear itself, is there?

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You want to make sure a model looks as good out of clothes as in them because it’s about their ability to SELL whatever it is they’re wearing.

And last but not least is a bit of a crossover – we paired a tuxedo shirt with red underwear to add a different kind of sexy to the shot.

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Paris in October – part 17 – My neighborhood in Paris

Some street scenes from my neighborhood. In reflection, I wish I had taken an afternoon and just photographed up and down the street. There were so many charming little restaurants and shops along the Rue St. Louis en L’Ile, you could easily make a photo study of just that one street.

Sorza Restaurant, Ile St. Louis
Sorza Restaurant, Ile St. Louis

The Cure Gourmande candy shop was ALWAYS busy. Probably as much to do with the bright, cheery interior as it does with the candies and biscuits they sell. Who wouldn’t want to go in and browse, and maybe try a sample or two?

Cure Gorumande sweet shop, Rue St. Louis en L'Ile
Cure Gorumande sweet shop, Rue St. Louis en L’Ile

Please give me your feedback on these two – which do you like better? I’m on the fence as to which one works best.

Patrick Allain Florist, Rue St. Louis en L'Ile
Patrick Allain Florist, Rue St. Louis en L’Ile

Patrick Allain Florist
Patrick Allain Florist

This was one of the few opportunities I had to break out my Rolleinar close-up filter sets and take a picture of something small. Given the size and weight of them, even though I only used them maybe twice on the whole trip, I don’t regret bringing them, especially when you compare them to a dedicated macro lens for an SLR system. I was drawn to the different textures and colors of the wood of the door, the rusty iron of the lion head, and the painted metal of the snake. And believe it or not, this was hand-held!

Door Knocker, Ile St. Louis
Door Knocker, Ile St. Louis

In closing, here’s another restaurant/wine bar in the neighborhood, this one on the Quai de Bourbon, facing the Pont Marie. It really shows the age of the building, as nothing on it is really square or level.

Bistro Au Franc Pinot
Bistro Au Franc Pinot

Another image published – Eastern Sierra Center for Photography website

http://esc4p.org/motels/

I submitted a photo to a call for entries from the Eastern Sierra Center for Photography the other day, and the photo was accepted! It’s even #1 in the series. The photo is one I took a while back of the Surratt house in Washington DC. The theme of the photos was “Motels”, based on a quote by William Borroughs –

“Motel, motel, motel, broken neon arabesque, loneliness moans across the continent like fog horns over still oily water of oily rivers.”

The motel connection in my image is a little tenuous, but Mrs. Surratt took in boarders to her home to help pay the bills before she was hanged for her alleged role in the Lincoln assassination (she was the first woman ever executed in the United States for a crime she may have only ever been tangentially involved in). I also felt the mood of the scene put into image the words in the Burroughs quote.

There was a requirement that the image be made with a large format camera (one of the primary missions of the Eastern Sierra Center for Photography is the promulgation of large format photography).

Secession Sushi - The Wok 'n Roll in the Surratt House
Secession Sushi – The Wok ‘n Roll in the Surratt House

The photo was shot on Kodak Portra 160 with a Canham 5×7 wood field camera using a Kodak Commercial Ektar 12″ lens.

Please go visit the Eastern Sierra Center’s website and read about their very worthwhile mission – supporting the continued use of view cameras for contemporary (and future – they have a program to expose kids to view cameras!) photography.

Glen Echo and Environs

There are some really great flower beds at Glen Echo, and the US Park Service does a terrific job of maintaining them. While waiting around for my student to arrive, I wandered about and took some close-up shots of the cone flowers and Black-Eyed Susans.

Cone Flowers
Cone Flowers
Bee, Cone Flower
Bee, Cone Flower
Bee, Cone Flowers
Bee, Cone Flowers

These were all shot with my regular 50mm f1.4 lens on my Canon 5D, not a special macro lens. I’m impressed with the close-focus capability, considering it ISN’T a macro lens. But I would love to try one of the L-series tele-macros for doing insects and the like. Bees get rather skittish, as do butterflies.

Cone Flower, Backlit
Cone Flower, Backlit
Black-Eyed Susans
Black-Eyed Susans

Zooming out, metaphorically speaking, here are some shots of the buildings around Glen Echo, which you’ve seen variations of before here on my blog.

Glen Echo Carousel, Evening
Glen Echo Carousel, Evening
Popcorn Gallery Bench, Evening
Popcorn Gallery Bench, Evening
Popcorn Gallery Marquee, Evening
Popcorn Gallery Marquee, Evening

The light was changing as my student and I were out for him to take photos with his 8×10 to use as practice negatives for platinum/palladium printing. While he was shooting his 8×10, I had the Canon with me and caught the Popcorn sign and the reflections on the windows of the carousel as the light was dropping and the neon came on.

Glen Echo Bridge, Evening
Glen Echo Bridge, Evening

The bridge that leads over the stream to the parking lot had beautiful slanting sidelight on it, and framed these two people perfectly, casting long shadows.

Glen Echo Sign, From the Parking Lot
Glen Echo Sign, From the Parking Lot
Glen Echo Sign, Moon
Glen Echo Sign, Moon

This is what I saw on my way out, after class was all done and I was walking back to the car. The Glen Echo sign is particularly magnificent and at the same time haunting after dark, because of the emptiness, especially on a weeknight.