x10 film photography, Kodak Tourist II Camera, 620 Film, get your work seen…by tagging, book of the month, darkroom tips, camera giveaways and more! Hosted by Michael Raso with Mat Marrash and John Fedel.
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Show Notes
FPP welcomes back guest co-host Mat Marrash
Pocket Light Meter for the iPhone!
iPhone POCKET LIGHT METER
Stephen M. Schaub’s FIGITAL REVOLUTION
“FIGITAL” stands for the dynamic fusion of film and digital photographic technologies. The Figital Revolution transcends self-serving industry hype and old-fart conservatism to get at the real issues photographers face today: how did we get here? Is digital all it’s cracked up to be? Why is film on life support? How can photographers create a sustainable art? Why do most photo magazines suck? The Figital Revolution is about all that and more.
Stephen invented the NO POD!
http://figitalrevolution.com/
GET YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY NOTICED….by TAGGING!
- Alright, so you’ve got a camera, you’re taking nice pictures, and now you’d like to have the rest of the world have a look at your work. What now?
- Check out Mat’s post on tagging!
620 FILM PHOTOGRAPHY
“620 roll film, introduced by Kodak in 1932 and discontinued in 1995[1], is basically the same as 120 roll film; it has the same width and length. The only difference is the spool which holds the film, in case of the 620 roll the core of the spool and the end flanges are smaller than that of the 120 roll.”
From: camerapedia.wikia.com/wiki/620_film
- Respooling 120 film onto 620 film spools! getnet.net/~gstewart/respool.htm
KODAK Tourist II 620 FILM CAMERA
“The Kodak Tourists were the last in a long line of American made folding roll film cameras from Eastman Kodak. The Tourist II, introduced in May of 1951, features a redesigned top cover and a new viewfinder, which contains frame lines for the optional 828 roll film adapter. Production was discontinued in July of 1958. The Tourists use 620 film making 8 2¼×3¼ exposures. The use of 828 roll film for 8 28×40mm exposures was an option. The Tourist’s most unusual feature is its back; through the use of cleverly engineered latches, it can be opened on the left side, right side, or removed completely.
From: camerapedia.wikia.com/wiki/Kodak_Tourist
BOOK OF THE MONTH
“A Kind of Rapture” by Robert Bergman brings together a selection of photos from Bergman’s two-year travels by car through the Rust Belt (Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Gary) and the East Coast, taking color pictures of everyday people who moved him profoundly. 51 color photos.”
From: amazon.com/Kind-Rapture-Robert-Bergman/dp/067944257X
Every now and then, the art world offers up an unlikely story, and Robert Bergman’s is one of them. He was born in New Orleans and raised mostly in Minneapolis. He began taking and developing snapshots at age 6, and save for a few teenage years he has strived to be a great photographer-artist ever since. But he has remained an out-of-step one, isolated from contemporary tastes, a cult figure to the few who have seen his work in person or in a 1998 book. The 65-year-old photographer went his own way over the past four decades, never selling a work until two years ago, but he nevertheless is about to burst onto the scene with two museum exhibitions, and next month he will have his first show at a commercial gallery, Yossi Milo in Chelsea, New York City.
—The Wall Street Journal review by JUDITH H. DOBRZYNSKI
DARKROOM TIPS:
Using KODAK XTOL DEVELOPER
“KODAK PROFESSIONAL XTOL Developer is a two-part powder developer for processing Kodak and other manufacturers’ normally exposed, pushed, or pulled black-and-white films. It offers full emulsion speed and easy mixing, and can be used as both a developer and a replenisher in a variety of equipment, from small tanks (8 to 64 fluidounces), trays, or rotary tubes to high-volume processors.”
From: kodak.com/global/en/professional/support/techPubs/j109/j109.pdf
8×10 FILM PHOTOGRAPHY
The term of art “Large Format” refers to film and camera formats that generally use sheet film in sizes equal to or larger than 4 inches by 5 inches (or 9×12 cm). (Although there are some view cameras in sizes smaller than 4×5 inches, or 6x9cm). Large Format distinguishes large cameras 4×5, 5×7, 4×10 and 8 x10 inches, from medium format cameras and film (6×6, 6×7, 6×8, 6x9cm roll film cameras) and from small format cameras of 35mm, 110 and smaller film sizes
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_format_%28photography%29
- Visit Mat Marrash at matmarrash.com
- Don’t forget…each month we give away vintage cameras and film! Tune in to the show.