The new song written by regular FPP contributor Jim Austin! What Shoe (Gets in to your Souls)? Well he gives us a pod cast from Butler New Jersey Whoa Mike ! - what shoe is that? Its another F P P for all analog lovers, With John, Dane, Mark, Hunter and Mat Our F P P is the fun nest podcast We filmsters have ever seen ... It runs the gamut from old one ten, All the way to eleven by ... [Read More]
Features
Jim Austin interviews NYC Photog Ned Harris
Photographer and Regular FPP Correspondent Jim Austin interviewed 87-year-old New York City photographer Ned Harris and the artist Shoshanna Spencer, Harris's granddaughter, about his life in photography. In addition to his many solo exhibitions from 1968 to the present, Mr. Harris has lectured on photography at the Visual Arts Center in New York, the Slifka Center At Yale, the Soho Photo ... [Read More]
The Large Format Primer
When I started to really get head-over-heels for film photography, one "look" that caught my eye constantly was that of large format. We've all seen it before, beautifully straight lines in architecture, hyper-realistic tonality in portraits, other-worldly shifting of perspective, all signature looks of large format. And chances are, if you're reading this blog post right now, you've already been ... [Read More]
Photographer Jim Austin tells us to slow down!
WELCOME TO THE SLOW PHOTOGRAPHY REBELLION ( SPR ) by Jim Austin MA "Like a lighthouse beam, bright and focused yet stil illuminating all directions, the slow photography process is bright, outwardly directed, and positive." In photography, we're at the dawn of a new rebellion. Doing slow photography for our art and personal images means taking on an attitude of awareness. ... [Read More]
Reuters TV’s Look at The Impossible Project 2012!
Reuters TV interviews Impossible Project USA VP Dave Bias. Dave talks about all things analog including some new analog gadgets from Impossible! For those who do not know, The Impossible Project is the indie company that makes new film for vintage Polaroid cameras. You can check out their site at http://www.the-impossible-project.com/ ... [Read More]
Testing the 110 Tiger!
110 is back! The Film Photography Project predicted that 2012 would be the year of 110 film, and they were right. The format gained popularity through the 1970s when Kodak introduced the format based on the subminiature 16mm format. My very first camera was a 110 camera that I used a grand totally of twice before it broke. So when all this hype about 110 was brewing through the FPP, I sort of ... [Read More]