Archive for July, 2011

Street photography from NYC and Philadelphia

Sunday, July 24th, 2011

I am more or less finished moving my blog. I am still busy scanning some of the landscapes I mentioned and will post them soon. Today though I am posting these street photographs.

Street photography is hard. Even in a place like New York City. I once naively thought that all I would have to do is just walk around and open the shutter and something great would happen on the film. Oh no. Not at all. After hundreds of rolls of film and about five years between shooting in Philadelphia and then New York, these four images really represent the best of all of those negatives. While I think that these are good pictures, the failure to success rate is staggering. I don’t really drag my camera around every time I leave my apartment anymore. I take it instead to somewhere I know I will be able to study the subject for some time, be it to a portrait session or a story or a landscape. There is too much going on out in the street and its really difficult to be able to focus on something. Everything is just too random, at least for me.

The first and last pictures are in New York, the other two are in Philadelphia.

Be back soon and hope you like the pictures and the new look.

I am moving moved from blogger to wordpress

Friday, July 15th, 2011

Nothing new to see here just yet. But I wanted to let you all know that I am moving moved this blog. Blogger is a swell piece of software to use but I have seen one too many dudes freak out over the licensing rights that must be given to google in order to display your content. I’ll admit I am one of those dudes. I know that almost every blogging software has the same stipulation but still. That and the fact that I seem to really enjoy doing way more work than necessary to accomplish even the simplest of tasks.

I am reading all about self hosting, transferring domains and installing wordpress. I have a decent enough grasp of it all and now I am just waiting for my domain to transfer from one provider to the other and then I should be all set. In the meantime I get to decide between www.paulgrossmann.com and www.paulgrossmann.com/blog. Of course if i go with /blog that means I have to come up with some sort of static webpage for paulgrossmann.com. See what I mean about doing too much work? I may at some point have a legit website so I would have to move the blog to its own directory anyway and that may be a real pain if I have to rewire a bunch of links from older posts. Would it look cheap to have a splash page that just had one big fat button that said “blog” on it? Probably. What do you think? Anyone have any experience switching domains and directories and basically making a mess of things where no mess existed before? Is it that big a deal to do?

Luckily enough I decided to move early into this blog and shouldn’t loose too much google juice, which I have discovered is an actual term. It’s like mojo for websites and apparently its primo. Would hate to waste it.

Whatever I decide there will be loads of new stuff to show when its all done. On top of the landscapes I mentioned earlier, I am going to be shooting more portraits and also posting some street photography I did a while back. Out of five years work and literally hundreds of exposures I have a grand total of 15 images from the street that are any good and about 5 that I really like. They were hanging out at the old paulgrossmann.com, but I blew that up yesterday.

Be back soon with a hot new address and RSS links and the whole nine!

How not to load a drum scanner

Saturday, July 9th, 2011

This particular Howtek 8000 that I made my scans on was not the one I received my training on. I used to work at a camera store in Manhattan that sold high end gear such as the Howtek. A technician from the manufacturer in Maryland came to our store for two days to train me on it. Apart from using software that is not very user friendly you had to load the drum with film, a task that takes some practice.

The drum itself is a large acrylic cylinder. It is huge. At a rough guess I think you could mount 4 8×10 pieces of film to it. Or any number of 35mm, 2 1/4 or 4×5 pieces of film. The drum is placed in a mounting station that allows you to rotate the drum as you load film onto it. It is loaded by taping the film to it, then taping a piece of acetate over the film. You only tape one side of the film and one side of the acetate, making hinges out of the tape. Then you squirt oil under the film, then on top of the film, then you close the acetate down on top of the film and seal the whole thing up with tape. A film and oil sandwich of sorts. Of course you squeeze all the air bubbles out before you seal it up. And you make damn sure the tape is on tight.

The reason for making sure the tape is on tight, and that the drum was completely free of oil before you began this whole process is that once the drum is loaded it is put back into the scanner where it spins. At very high RPM. An RPM that could totally destroy a piece of film.

One day a guy came into the camera store I worked in. This was immediately after I received my training on the Howtek. He was interested in the scanner and wanted a demo of it, which included me scanning one of his images so he could take it home and test the image. Most people just bring any old neg or chrome and test it out. Well this guy tried to smoke one past us and it sort of blew up right in his face.

A drum scan would cost you about 60 dollars, at least in 2001. But we did not charge anything for a demo scan, because we were trying to sell the scanner itself, not the scan. So a photographer came in and wanted us to scan this chrome for him, a 645 piece of color transparency film. Since it was a demo I did not feel the need to go through the oil mounting process described earlier and opted instead for a dry mount, which is a totally legit mounting procedure, provided of course that the drum was clean before hand. Which ours was not. It still had light traces of oil on it. I admit this was my fault. I didn’t clean the drum well enough from the last use. Nor did I notice that the drum was still a touch slippery in places.

So I load the drum with his one chrome, which was an image of a model wearing a red sweater against a white background. Not a great image, but obviously professional. I load the drum and begin scanning. The drum spins, the salesman is giving his talk and after the preview of the image comes up, I make some edits and hit “Scan”. Everyone is still smiling at this point as the drum begins to spin at over 240 RPM.

Then the very normal whirring sound of drum scanning abruptly changed into a sound that could best be described as the sound you get if you threw a CD into a paper shredder. At this point the smiles all went away. Since I loaded the piece of film without acetate and with only two pieces of tape on to a drum that still had traces of oil on it, the tape never fully adhered to the drum. At the high speed it was only a matter of time before the tape failed and the film collided with the inside of the scanner and got chopped into confetti. And when I opened the scanner that is exactly what this poor guys chrome looked like, little tiny pieces of emulsion except for the small jagged piece still attached to the drum that read “Fuji RDP”.

The salesman and I both wore expressions that said “you know thats too bad, but it was still kinda cool” while the poor guy who commissioned this demo had turned stark white and looked like he needed to sit down. He basically saw what happened, fought the urge to vomit and then walked out.

We couldn’t figure out why he reacted the way he did. After all it was just a test piece of film that he wanted scanned, some outtake from one of his shoots, right? Well no. My friend the salesman and I rather quickly realized that this guy had tried to get a pro quality scan on the cheap, and that this particular piece of film was the keeper from a live job he had yet to deliver. So all of his work in producing this picture of a girl in a nice red sweater evaporated in a cloud of film dust right before his very eyes. He then had to somehow tell his client that basically, the dog ate his homework.

I suppose this could be an argument in favor of digital, or at least in favor of paying for a scan. But what it really wound up being was hilarious. Maybe its cruel to laugh at someone’s utterly catastrophic turn of bad luck, but when you are trying to smoke one past us in such a sneaky and cheap matter, laughing doesn’t feel so bad.

And you can bet that when it came time to scan my own negatives on the same scanner, I taped the HELL out them first.

Chilean Landscapes

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

Some landscapes I took in Chile. Well technically I’m not sure if the inclusion of a dog and a group of people still allows for a photograph to be called a landscape, but that is what I am going with.

One morning I got up early and headed out on my own before we loaded up the van and got on the road. I came across this empty lot and saw a stray dog, one of many in Chile. He saw me too and headed my way. I was thankful for the focal point for the photograph, and I like dogs well enough but for a second he looked as if he might chase me and bite me and ruin the impending trip south towards the farm and Puerto Montt. Luckily he just stopped, looked at me, and walked on.

The second photo is from the top of a hill in ViƱa del Mar where a friend of ours had a condo, and the last two are from the farm and the river we had to cross to get to it.

I will be posting more landscapes that I have been taking, actual recent work as opposed to the several years old pictures I have put up so far. Some medium format images which scan really well on the 4490 and some 35mm which I think makes for a good grainy landscape. Of course there are still more images from Chile to post as well.