— ROGERS

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optical


Kubrick — via Bagelturf — shooting in candlelight using a modified Zeiss f/0.7 lens originally intended for spy satellites. I don’t think I saw the f/0.7, but I am pretty sure the f/1 Zeiss he had modified to mount onto a Mitchell camera was at the Kubrick exhibition in the ACMI (Melbourne) last year. There is an extract from American Cinematographer about it at Visual Memory (they also have a trove of additional Stanley Kubrick archives).

Current fast lenses include the Leica Noctilux-M 50mm f/1, VFX Supervisor Tommy Oshima has one… as do quite a few others… current version is $6k USD new. There is also the discontinued Canon EF 50mm f/1.0.

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I did this as an exercise to see whether printing a book would be better than doing separate 8×10’s of some shots… well, at least it started that way. Then I got carried away… and now a lovely 8×10″ 30 40 page book. You can get it here and you can preview the insides here: Echo/1 China.

From Guilin in the south of China, to the Inner Mongolian Grasslands, Beijing and Shanghai. It is the off-set view of a rather epic 3 week Olympic shoot…

I’ve convinced myself to do a series (hence the Echo/1 title). In case you were wondering, an echo is “the persistence of sound after the source has stopped.” Much like looking back at a photo, an echo of light.

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The latest edition of Monocle has an article about the traction that film maintains in Japan [Film Stars]. While the numbers may be small (film cannot best the onward march of digital), it does in my opinion, illustrate something which oddly fits with the Japanese psyche. Retro cool? Sentimental regret? Just another Japanese subculture to enjoy?

The advantage in Japan, of course, are the huge number of recently “retired” used-cameras, at very reasonable prices; an abundance of shops that will actually sell a selection of decent film stock; the ability to process black-and-white almost anywhere (!); and a huge, photo-mad, gadget-saturated population…

So does this predilection towards film indicate craft, stubbornness, or nostalgia? Probably all three. But shops such as Map Camera — stocked to the rafters with beautiful, mint-condition, second hand cameras — are a seductive sight. It isn’t hard in Japan to arm yourself with a pretty decent camera and a pocket full of film. There is even choice: from obscure Soviet cameras to large format ones as big as your head, which can be found inside and out of the normal camera shop radar.

I’ll bet that a lot of the people chewing through film have come from shooting a lot of digital. In going back to film, they get to prove their photographic chops without chimping.

The result of all this is that there are film-loaded cameras in Japan exposing away in almost pointed contrition for discarded analogue ways. Of course this happens in other countries, but perhaps without the same readily accessible fervour.

Firing off exposures as loosely as people do with digital cameras may just create more visual noise – but there will always be beauty that emerges from the rough.

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iPhone.jpg File under obscure: The iPhone’s colour gamut is quite good! Which can’t be a bad thing, right?

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Greyscale Gorilla’s review of Aperture 2.0.

When Aperture 2.0 came out. I was pleasantly surprised to see that apple had dropped the price to $199. Early reviews of the software claimed that the speed issues were also solved, and the the new version was super fast. So far, so good. When I go take a closer look at the specs however, I am astonished to see that Apple Aperture still had no Curves. Thanks right, after all the criticism, Apple still decides to leave out the most flexible color correction tool available. I understand that Aperture is not supposed to be a full replacement for Photoshop. I don’t expect Aperture to have some esoteric Photoshop feature like Gradient Map, or be able to execute complicated layer based photo editing, but I am talking about Curves here.

And the follow-up:

Why did I decide on Aperture over Lightroom? It was the ease of use, and overall feature set that brought be back to Aperture over Lightroom. The full frame mode is GREAT. I can flip through all the images and quickly rate and process the best ones checking for focus. The full RGB levels editor in Aperture is actually MORE flexible than Lightroom’s curves. HOW? The ability to adjust the “quarter pointsâ€� on the levels graph allows one to emulate curves. It’s a little tricky to get used to, but after I figured it out, it all became clear. And, with the ability to adjust the red green and blue separate, I can do 90% of what curves can do.

And a different review going the other way:

I spent a couple of days with it and to be honest couldn’t see anything that would stop me pushing ahead with my migration to Lightroom. Ironically some of the new search options (â€�have adjustmentsâ€�) actually made it easier to manage the data migration. And whilst speed had improved, it still wasn’t snappy in the same way Lightroom is.

It seems to me the number one Aperture plug-in would be a curves tool. Number two would be Noise Ninja (or similar). And if only there was a way to save “looks” like there is in Lightroom, although someone has developed a work-around… (can’t find the link, but basically it was making a library of your favourite photo’s with their preset looks, and lifting and stamping from them – simple, but workable).

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