Hasselblad 500C/M


21
Jul 10

M.@ IMA: Using Depth of Field as your guide to photograph kids

M. @ IMA

It is so hard to get a kid to stay still when you are trying to photograph. It becomes even more of a problem when you are using a manual focus camera like the Hasselblad. The camera is a big hulking piece of metal and is very heavy. Most of the time I just pre-set the focus by using the DOF scale corresponding to the aperture setting I am using.
Hasselblad Medium Format Lens

I then guesstimate the distance and quickly make sure that the subject (kid) is within acceptable focus. The beauty of Medium Format negatives is that even if the photograph is slightly out of focus it doesn’t seem to show in prints no larger than 8X10. The photograph above was indeed slightly out of focus but can you tell by looking at it?


3
Jan 10

Seeing what others miss and making it your own

Somewhere, Indiana

I was telling someone over lunch that photography changed the way I look at the world. Before I purchased my first camera, I would go around my business, never took in my surroundings, and almost always never interacted with locals. That changed after I started photographing, I started noticing and appreciating my surroundings more and more. When I look at a building I wonder what was the architect thinking when he drew the plans. When I look at an old and decaying tree stump I try to look for the beauty in its rotting structure. That was the case when I took the photo above. I was coming back from a weekend trip to Lake Patoka about which I blogged last year and instead of barreling down the interstate I decided to take one of the side roads. This road was not paved at all. It was gravel and the going was a bit rough. As I kept driving down this path I noticed this meadow to my left and how beautiful it looked as the sun was rising. I pulled to the side of the road, set up my camera, and got to work before the sun got too high and the light too harsh. The camera I used was a Hasselblad 500C/M with a 60mm Distagon Lens + Polarizer and the film used was Fuji NPC160 Color Print Film. I am sure many have driven down that gravel road before, but I don’t think anyone ever stopped where I did and took a photograph to preserve that moment in time and space. This photo has given me ideas for other projects that I plan to pursue this year.

Somewhere, Indiana

Your landscapes are around you. You don’t have to travel to some exotic locale or National Park – look around you, keep your camera handy, and more importantly keep your eyes open.