Welcome

Photography is memory. I read that somewhere and it makes sense. What else can explain the universal appeal of our family snaps? All the images I've ever made are in the past and help me remember what I was doing at the time of exposure — no less.

I used to make Polaroid 54 and 55 exposures as well as two Tri-X negatives per subject when time permitted. This gave me a print and three negatives. This exercise took about 15 minutes. I took water and clearing salts in sealed containers along for the Pol negs. Since Polaroid has discontinued their film making I am at a loss. This circumstance is a great and dreary disappointment. Not to mention the fact that the Polaroid backs I own have now become obsolete. Time changes all things it seems and not always for the better.

I make black and white prints using traditional wet darkroom techniques on silver gelatine papers. Film of choice has been TriX since the first attempts in the early sixties. Now developed in HC110B and/or Pyro after Hutchings. Negatives which please me are printed — often a few years after making the exposure — other negs are filed.

I've also made platinum prints from digitally printed negatives. I learned this process at a workshop given by Burkhardt Kiegeland a few years back. Making a digital negative for an antique process may seem strange, but it was a way to learn the process without having to make numerous LF negatives first. I don't think I'll be doing anymore platinum printing soon as I would prefer contact printing from in-camera negatives of the final format. This means ULF and I'm not financially well off enough to go that route. Yet...

Most of my photos are from within an hour's drive of home. The Weinviertel in Lower Austria has been under cultivation for millennia and is a lovely and human scaled landscape.

Cameras: The first was a Brownie, then my father's 6x9 Speed Graphic. When I moved to Europe for a year (I thought) in 1972 I took along my Topcon Unirex and two or three lenses. Great camera at a reasonable price. It featured aperture priority and a TTL light meter that served well. I gave up the brand after two camera bodies failed and no replacements were available - those were pre-Ebay times. I can't remember what I did with the cameras and lenses — to my chagrin.

For many years years I've used a Nikon F4 (purchased in 1991) and a Linhof Technika V (bought used in 1984). The Nikon's fine for snapshots. The Linhof is for work where large negatives and the impressive detail they capture are important, although the Linhof can be hand-held using a 6x9cm roll film back with good results.

Recently I was able to get a Topcon Unirex and three lenses for an astonishing €15 including shipping! So how I have three active cameras. I also own two Minox 8mm cameras — a "B" and a "C". These subminiatures haven't seen service since the mid 1970s.

I can also work up digital files. Printing them is another matter. I tend to use this technique for snapshots only.

To the links page.



 

Korneuburger Kunstkilometer 2008
Flickr stuff

 


Altmetallhändler— June 2009
Kodak DX7590
Stitched with MS ICE
Workup in Picture Window Pro

Having a lot of fun with son, Patrick's, Kodak DX7590. This is a small bridge camera with a very fine lens. It makes 5MB jpeg files which can be stitched together with some very nice results. See above. I've made images of 35 pictures! I use MicroSoft's ICE which can be downloaded for free: http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/redmond/groups/ivm/ICE/

You may need to download their dotnetfx35. This is about 250MB and takes awhile, but don't be discouraged. If you have Vista you won't need tp download it as it's incorporated into Vista. I use XP Pro and that hasn't got this frame ware.

See my new Panorama Gallery

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-> To the galleries
People - Shoemaker - Rome - France - Close to Home - Stilllives - Elba - Südtirol - Venice - Vienna - Scotland - Galgenberg - Outer Hebrides - Panoramas

 

 

 

 
DESIGN BY SEAN © PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL C. O'DONOGHUE