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<title>Visions Of Vocation</title><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/index.html</link><description>Photographic technique&#x2c; methods&#x2c; tools&#x2c; and assignments</description><dc:language>en</dc:language><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><dc:rights>Copyright 2006 - 2010 Tim Johnsrude</dc:rights><dc:date>2010-07-19T07:30:38-07:00</dc:date><admin:generatorAgent rdf:resource="http://www.realmacsoftware.com/" />
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<lastBuildDate>Fri, 25 Dec 2009 08:31:37 -0800</lastBuildDate><item><title>Industrial Prairie</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><category>Equipment</category><category>Rural</category><dc:date>2010-07-19T07:30:38-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/18d4c6e3b81552a020922a0fc9b03c6c-28.php#unique-entry-id-28</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/18d4c6e3b81552a020922a0fc9b03c6c-28.php#unique-entry-id-28</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[When one thinks of Minnesota or North Dakota, industry usually isn&rsquo;t the first thought. All you can see over western North Dakota are canyons, rolling hills, and the occasional oil donkey rising and falling as it pumps &lsquo;black gold&rsquo; from the Bakken oil fields. Farms and field spread over the flat prairie of eastern North Dakota and northwestern Minnesota. Quiet county roads carry only a few cars or farm machinery from town to town and field to field. Grain elevators are usually the only buildings higher than an equipment storage shed. City dwellers don&rsquo;t think &lsquo;industrial&rsquo;  when they see the prairies. At first glance it looks flat, empty, and <em>very</em> rural. <br /><br />Running a farm is an industrial operation. Modern tractors are capable of dragging heavy machinery through dense topsoil in swaths thirty feet wide and two feet deep. Combine harvesters cut through thousands of acres of ripened crop and separate the stalks and other foreign material from the grain. Full size semi-tractor trucks haul tons of grain from the fields to terminals where it is loaded into railroad hopper cars for transport to food processing centers or seaports for shipment overseas. The agriculture industry in this region produces soybeans, sugar beets, barley, oats, wheat, potatoes, and corn. All of this must happen during the short growing season before brutally cold winters and blizzards encapsulate the landscape. <br /><br />The risk is high but the rewards are great. No one can control the weather, pest infestations, market fluctuations, or labor disputes. Different crops require different equipment, moisture and temperature levels, soil quality, and production timing. Agricultural businesses experience production delays from regional flooding, crop disease, drought, excess rainfall, wildfire, and equipment failure. Market price fluctuations make forecasting difficult. Farmers must be skilled businessmen to produce food on large economies of scale. They need to understand the commodity markets and their own production and storage capacities. They have the experience and skill of any industrial plant manager to assure that equipment is properly maintained, capital resources are efficiently utilized, suppliers understand their requirements, and the labor force is trained and ready in sufficient numbers to complete their work on time and on budget from planting to harvest. Farmers need to produce the right mix of crops to reduce their losses should the weather be too cold, too hot, too wet, or too dry, yet provide the greatest yield for the lowest cost to maximize their profit. If commodity prices are too low, they need to sell enough product to satisfy their creditors while storing the rest at the proper moisture and temperature levels until demand improves and commodity prices increase.<br /><br />Being a film photographer, I need time to harvest <em>my </em>crop, but I brought a digital Fuji Finepix S2 Pro SLR along for those subjects of opportunity. &lsquo;Harvest Ready&rsquo; is an image of a Versatile 435 articulated tractor highlighting its two critical features: power and traction. It stands as tall as a two story building and can pull anything from a large cultivator to a sugar beet harvester through knee-deep mud in all kinds of weather. It is a symbol of power and capability. A machine with <em>attitude</em>.<br /><br />More from my <em>Industrial Prairie</em> assignment will come as I unlock the latent images from exposed film.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/rural.html" rel="self" title="Rural"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Harvest Ready" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/harvest-ready.jpg" width="386" height="257"/></a><br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Nikons and Nikkormats</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Equipment</category><dc:date>2010-06-25T06:26:41-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/f3192ffa275b1047207dc2290c54917d-27.php#unique-entry-id-27</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/f3192ffa275b1047207dc2290c54917d-27.php#unique-entry-id-27</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[In this age of automation and instant digital gratification, it is hard to imagine anyone still using a purely mechanical camera, unless they have been lured into the Holga niche. Even among film aficionados, most &lsquo;analog&rsquo; cameras use autoexposure or autofocus to help the photographer. There are a few of us who still prefer manual methods. <br /><br />The Nikon F put Nikon on the map. Back in 1959 this camera was a less expensive alternative to the high precision German cameras, which were the &lsquo;gold standard&rsquo; of the day. The Nikon featured interchangeable lenses, focusing screens, viewfinders, and even film backs. It did not have a built in light meter, but back in the 50&rsquo;s most photographers distrusted integral light meters and preferred the more accurate dedicated light meters. The Nikons and Nikkormats later featured more accurate integral light meters and photographers began to appreciate their convenience.<br /><br />The Nikon F was built like a brick and able to take the usual knocks and drops of professional photojournalism. The Nikkormat series cameras were the &lsquo;poor man&rsquo;s&rsquo; Nikon. They didn&rsquo;t have all of the features of the Nikon F, but they did use the same interchangeable lenses and were often backup cameras for the working pro. Along with the build quality of a professional camera, it&rsquo;s the optics that matter.  For years, Nikons have been THE  cameras to which others were judged.<br /><br />It&rsquo;s wonderful that these legendary machines have become so affordable since the rise in popularity of digital photography, but also sad that they are so &lsquo;last century&rsquo;. The images they produce are as excellent as they have always been, which brings me back to a time when photographers had to instinctively know the optimal combination of lens aperture, shutter speed, and focus for the film they were using, and a bit of luck helped.<br /><br />&lsquo;Pre-Game&rsquo;, found in the <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/baseball.html" rel="self" title="Baseball">Baseball Gallery</a>, won First Place, Best of Category, and Judge&rsquo;s Choice at the Kitsap County Fair in 2008. It was shot with a Nikkormat FTn mounted with a 50mm f/1.4 Nikkor-P lens on Fomapan 200 film. <br /><br />Go Nikon!<br /><br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Pre-Game" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/pre-game.jpg" width="320" height="213"/><br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Government Issue</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Military</category><category>Monochrome</category><category>Assignments</category><dc:date>2010-06-12T06:50:20-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/bcb2f9e778152c36d4bcf15dc2cd668c-26.php#unique-entry-id-26</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/bcb2f9e778152c36d4bcf15dc2cd668c-26.php#unique-entry-id-26</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[The Puget Sound was once vulnerable to invasion by sea. In the latter part of the nineteenth century, the timber industry was burgeoning and the Navy had a shipyard established in the deep water seaway protected by mountains and rugged rainforest on all sides. It was a tempting prize for an ambitious conquering nation to blockade the Sound and keep the Navy bottlenecked within. The United States understood this vulnerability, so in 1896 Congress authorized the Secretary of War to fortify and build a complex of artillery emplacements to repel potential attacks of the Puget Sound from the Pacific Ocean.<br /><br />Fort Flagler, Fort Casey, and Fort Worden were built in a triangle formation to protect Admiralty Inlet.  Armed with 10 and 12 inch guns mounted on &ldquo;disappearing&rdquo; carriages, these bastions of freedom stood watch over the Straits of San Juan ready for an invasion that would never come. Made obsolete prior to World War II by improved military technologies, these bases were closed in the 1950&rsquo;s and the land was returned to the State of Washington. They later became state parks that preserve an important part of our nation&rsquo;s history. They are wonderful to photograph.<br /><br />I recently visited Fort Flagler on the Olympic Peninsula, located just south of Port Townsend. The concrete bunkers that protected the gun batteries and the military hardware that remain at the site have form and texture that photograph well in monochrome. Ammunition storage bunkers and munitions elevators also remain, hidden deep inside underground chambers protected by these concrete structures. <br /><br />Random cracks in the thick concrete sections show the power of the Pacific Northwest climate working against man&rsquo;s best engineering efforts. Monochrome images communicate the form and texture of the iron guns and concrete structures without the distraction of color. The gun mounts that remain are quiet, yet their presence is a powerful reminder of our desire to remain a free nation.<br /><br />The images of Fort Flagler in the <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/military.html" rel="self" title="Military">Military</a> and <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/ancientIndustry.html" rel="self" title="Ancient Industry">Ancient Industry</a> galleries were shot with a Nikon FM2n camera and 24mm f/2.8 and 50mm f/1.8 Nikkor lenses. I used TMax 400 film exposed at ISO 200 and developed in Microdol-X developer, stock dilution, for 10-1/2 minutes at 20 degrees C.<br /><br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Gun Mount" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/gun-mount.jpg" width="418" height="298"/>                     <img class="imageStyle" alt="Line Of Sight" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/line-of-sight.jpg" width="201" height="302"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>So What Is Fine Art Anyway?</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><category>Process</category><category>Gallery</category><dc:date>2010-05-31T14:10:10-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/e60ba8e203c6731cf582277b0855682a-25.php#unique-entry-id-25</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/e60ba8e203c6731cf582277b0855682a-25.php#unique-entry-id-25</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Before I knew exactly what the term meant, I was always uncomfortable referring to my work as &lsquo;fine art&rsquo;. I always thought it was arrogant to believe that photographs produced by a rank amateur, such as myself, could be referred to as &lsquo;fine&rsquo; anything. The mere mention of &lsquo;fine art&rsquo; to me conjures a mental image of George Bellows or John Singer Sargent paintings hung in posh metropolitan art galleries.<br /><br />The definition of fine art varies as much as the person asking the question. It generally refers to works produced by the artist&rsquo;s own hand as opposed to copies reproduced by a machine, like a magazine or a sales brochure. Does that mean that your vacation snapshots qualify as &lsquo;fine art&rsquo;? Of course it does. Fine art merely indicates how the print was made, but not necessarily its artistic quality. The term is frequently used as a marketing tool because it sells art.<br /><br />There are a few highly acclaimed photographers in the art world. Ansel Adams, Arthur Stieglitz, and Dorothea Lange have certainly made their mark as photographers and artists, but what is a true measure of success? Is it the artist&rsquo;s ability to immortalize subjects from a bygone age? Is it technical brilliance? Perhaps the size of the prints that an artist has sold or the reputation of the galleries where they exhibit their work. In Internet circles, the aesthetic value of a photograph could be measured by the number of comments it draws on Flickr or Facebook. Are these artists just experiencing their 15 minutes of fame or will their images become recognizable icons of their generation enjoyed by audiences decades, or even centuries later?<br /><br />Artists who rely on their work to earn a living are at a serious disadvantage over those of us who have a day job. For the professional artist, there are deadlines, fickle clients, deadbeats, unscrupulous agents, and the persistent threat of copyright infringement or outright theft. For those of us who simply enjoy creating photographs, we have the luxury of time and total freedom from market forces. We blithely snap away at subjects that we want to photograph while experimenting with different image developing processes and techniques in our free time. We don&rsquo;t have to sell art to eat, but selling a print feeds our ego.<br /><br />Making a respectable living producing &lsquo;fine art&rsquo; may be one measure of success, but enjoying what you do and winning a contest or two along the way is another. If you are proud to sign your name to an image, you can claim to be a &lsquo;fine art&rsquo; photographer. How successful you are is up to your audience.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Vacant Stare" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/vacant-stare.jpg" width="386" height="253"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Monochrome Is Back&#x21;</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><category>Military</category><category>Website</category><category>Process</category><category>Monochrome</category><dc:date>2010-05-21T06:10:28-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/60502d84c6ae5dd506cc7d185c9c9dd2-24.php#unique-entry-id-24</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/60502d84c6ae5dd506cc7d185c9c9dd2-24.php#unique-entry-id-24</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[The <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/monochrome.html" rel="self" title="Monochrome">monochrome gallery</a> is back. I took it off the website and replaced it with Natural FX earlier this month, but I got more hits on the monochrome gallery in two weeks than I did with the new one. I spend a fair amount of time studying monochrome photographs on the web, so it just makes sense to include a monochrome gallery on Visions of Vocation.<br /><br />Monochrome processing is easy to do without a lot equipment. It produces images with more natural character than color film or digital photographs. Monochrome images have shape, tone, and grain without a lot of computer post-processing. After scanning the negatives, I simply adjust the contrast, remove the dust spots, and post.<br /><br />From the cheap and grainy Chinese films to the fine grain and high resolution of Ilford Pan F, each kind has its own character. In combination with different developers, developer dilutions, processing time, and temperature, a photographer has many different options without the distractions of color or the buttons and menu selections found on the camera itself. All you need is a solid 35 mm or medium format camera, a good light meter, a few prime lenses, maybe a red or yellow filter, and an understanding of the zone system. &lsquo;Rolling your own&rsquo; with bulk film loader helps keep the costs down.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="HP Towing" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/hp-towing.jpg" width="275" height="386"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Green Photography</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Process</category><category>Equipment</category><dc:date>2010-05-14T21:30:16-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/acfad0bb956108b623cca36120118c56-23.php#unique-entry-id-23</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/acfad0bb956108b623cca36120118c56-23.php#unique-entry-id-23</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Traditional photography, now referred to as analog, uses chemical solutions to change the latent image on film into a printable negative. Hydroquinone is the main active ingredient in black and white film developers. Acetic acid is in stop bath. The ammonium thiosulphate in fixer stabilizes the developed image while washing away excess silver compounds left on the less exposed areas of the film. With all of this chemistry entering our waste water systems, how can traditional chemical photography be considered &lsquo;green&rsquo;?<br /><br />In very dilute solutions, the hydroquinone in developer decomposes in minutes. The acetic acid in stop bath is of the same kind found in orange juice or vinegar, just more concentrated. The ammonium thiosulphate and silver compounds in exhausted fixer are a different matter. With use, the silver concentration in fixer increases to the point where the fixer becomes exhausted. The silver can be recovered, refined, and reused. The ammonia thiosulphate is treated in waste water plants to remove excess nitrogen and prevent excessive algae growth in rivers and streams. If &lsquo;analog&rsquo; photographers work responsibly, all of these chemicals can be treated and neutralized. Commercial processor technology uses color chemistry to its maximum potential. Modern hazardous waste processing later renders it environmentally safe.<br /><br />Before digital photography, people kept their cameras longer than they do now. For example, a photographer who bought a Nikon FTn would use the camera for years while building an investment of lenses. New camera models were introduced every five to eight years instead of every year or two as digital cameras are today. Photographers would &lsquo;upgrade&rsquo; to a new camera body from time to time, but they usually kept their lenses and older bodies until they wore out. Back then, any Nikon lens worked on any Nikon body. Today, photographers need to watch which lenses work with certain cameras. A Nikkor-P 105 mm f/2.5 lens built in 1968 will not function on a Nikon D200 camera. In fact, older lenses used on newer digital cameras can permanently damage them.<br /><br />I can&rsquo;t use my Nikkor-P 105 mm lens on my Fuji S2 Pro digital SLR, but I can use my Nikon AF-D lenses on my Nikon F. Now that&rsquo;s green!<br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Pre-Photoshop Surrealism</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><category>Process</category><dc:date>2010-05-05T16:37:02-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/bafe5047291047a3e3bd8657144d4af7-22.php#unique-entry-id-22</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/bafe5047291047a3e3bd8657144d4af7-22.php#unique-entry-id-22</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[There are times when an artist has to try something a little different to jar the creativity within. Edward Hopper did this often by moving between etching, painting, and sketching. He would paint portraits, landscapes, railroad scenes, restaurant interiors, houses, and even sunlight striking the interior wall in a house using pencil, pen, watercolor, and oil paint.<br /><br />I am certainly no Ed Hopper, but I am finding that my narrow focus on military subjects, particularly Navy ones, is starting to feel a bit ordinary. Living in a Navy fleet concentration area, there are many military and industrial subjects to photograph, so I try to capture them in a different way.<br /><br />Many digital photographers are well acquainted with software, like Adobe Photoshop, to manipulate image color, hue, sharpness, and exposure to some degree, but it can also radically change the image until it bears no resemblance to the original photograph. Artistically there is nothing wrong with this, but to me &ldquo;re-photographing&rdquo; digital images in this manner is more akin to the montages that I made in kindergarten with white glue and pictures cut from old Sears or Eaton&rsquo;s catalogs.<br /><br />I retired the Monochrome and Infrared galleries today and, in their place, created the Natural FX gallery. This is where I can place strange or unusual photographs that I made in a more traditional way. A couple of weeks ago, I took my 35 mm pinhole camera out of the closet, loaded it with a roll of Fuji Velvia 100 slide film, grabbed my tripod and light meter, and trekked out to the Bremerton waterfront. <br /><br />Photographs made with a pinhole camera have a soft, ethereal quality that is hard to match with a standard lens. The camera, a teakwood box in this case, has been fitted with a thin piece of brass bored with a very small hole where the lens should be. I&rsquo;m not sure of its size, but the hole is about one-hundredth of an inch in diameter. In 35 mm terms, that would be an aperture of about f/138. In broad daylight, an exposure on 100 ISO film takes about three or four seconds, hence the need for a sturdy tripod.<br /><br />You never know what you will get with a pinhole camera. Sometimes it is hard to keep the camera stable on the tripod during the very manual exposure. The shutter is my fingertip. Inadvertent double exposures are common. Sometimes if the light is low, there is a significant shift away from the expected &ldquo;normal&rdquo; in color or hue of the finished image. Sometimes this failure of the Reciprocity Law leaves only a dark space on the film where an image should be. Exposure variations can create either unexpected beauty or an imperceptible blur. Variability can give a &lsquo;normal&rsquo; composition a pleasing surreal quality, or just junk.<br /><br />Additionally in this gallery, I placed images that I shot using a digital SLR with an R72 filter over the lens. The R72 filter blocks most visible light below the 720 nanometer wavelength and allows more near-infrared (NIR) and infrared (IR) light to strike the camera&rsquo;s image sensor. This gives us a chance to see the unseen. Foliage glows brightly while concrete and steel, which reflect less infrared light, assume darker tones. The photographer can adjust the color palette of the image post-production for a general cold indigo, warm blue-green, or copper patina appearance. In any case, the image looks very different from those created by the &lsquo;white&rsquo; visible light that our eyes see.<br /><br />I&rsquo;m not sure what I will try next. Whatever it may be, I&rsquo;m sure that I can do it  without technology getting in the way or making decisions for me.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Submarine Through A Pinhole" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/submarine-through-a-pinhole.jpg" width="340" height="272"/>                                  <img class="imageStyle" alt="Surreal Capitol" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/surreal-capitol.jpg" width="269" height="269"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Like a Kid in a Candy Store</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Equipment</category><dc:date>2010-05-02T20:52:57-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0ae208201a392c5390920c0e2130388a-21.php#unique-entry-id-21</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0ae208201a392c5390920c0e2130388a-21.php#unique-entry-id-21</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Yesterday, the <a href="http://www.pspcs.org/" rel="external">Puget Sound Photographic Collectors Society (PSPCS)</a> held its annual Photographic Show and Swap Meet in Puyallup, Washington. I look forward to this event all year long. Vendors and private collectors gather to buy, sell, and trade their photographic wares that range from century-old box cameras to modern professional grade digital equipment. It&rsquo;s like eBay, except buyers get to look at the merchandise before money changes hands, there are no last second bidding wars, and no haggling over &lsquo;postage and handling&rsquo;. If you&rsquo;re lucky, you can even win a door prize!<br /><br />I wasn&rsquo;t in the building five minutes when I came across a table sporting a pair of Mamiya twin lens reflex cameras. I asked how much the seller was asking for one of them, a well maintained C220f, like I was even interested. I already own a C330 and a model C330f. What on earth would I do with a third body? The camera included an 80mm f/2.8 blue dot lens and a strap. I would need to produce $90 cash to walk away with it.<br /><br />Up to this point, I had never used either the C220f or the C330s. I performed the usual superficial inspection. Wind the film crank. Look in the viewfinder for cracks and the kind of gunk that can accumulate over a few decades. Cock and trip the shutter. Check out the shutter speeds, especially the slower ones. Open the camera back. Look for damage or corrosion. Check out the condition of the light seals.<br /><br />But where was the door latch? The usual chrome button-shaped film door catch release wasn&rsquo;t there! I pulled every knob and moved every slide and protrusion that I could find to release the film door but I just couldn&rsquo;t open it. The seller was equally baffled. Most Mamiya C series TLRs have an obvious round silver catch on the top edge of the film door, which was conspicuously absent in these two models. Since the vendor was also selling a C330s with a similar film door design, I thought that I could find some leverage with technical information should I decide to take the camera home. With the seller&rsquo;s permission, I took the camera from vendor to vendor looking for someone with expertise in the Mamiya C220f.<br /><br />I asked four of them, including someone who looked like George Eastman himself if he were alive today, but no one could pull the sword from the stone. The fifth man was the one I was looking for. After a bit of fiddling, he discovered that by moving a spring loaded slider on the left side of the body next to the film door while depressing the film take-up spool axel knob, the film door would pop open with ease. (He later confessed that he was a camera repairman with over 20 years experience and couldn&rsquo;t bear the humiliation if word got out that he couldn&rsquo;t open the film door of a 35 year old camera!)<br /><br />I approached the original vendor and, armed with confidence and my newfound knowledge of Mamiya TLR film doors, offered her $80 firm. Her best price was $90, but knowing that unless her next customer was profoundly familiar with Mamiya C series cameras, she would be stuck with two unsalable items. A deal was struck, and I am now the proud owner of a THIRD Mamiya TLR body and a second 80mm lens. The lens alone was worth the price!<br /><br />Since my mission that day was to find 46 mm filters for my two other Mamiya TLRs, I bought a roll of Agfa Isopan ISS 200 black and white film that expired during the Johnson Administration and a roll of Kodacolor 120 film that I simply MUST expose and process. The color shift from film that is more than 30 years outdated will be a spectacle to behold, or an utter failure. I&rsquo;ll have to shoot it and see for myself. While digging through bins of used filters of all colors and sizes, I bought a lens wrench, a couple of 620 film spools, and a 58mm #29 red filter for my Mamiya M645 150mm portrait lens. You never know when you will shoot a portrait of someone riddled with acne. Besides, a filter THAT red will render clear daylight skies on monochrome film practically black, which will bring out any cumulus clouds rather nicely. This filter also fits my Mamiya M645 55mm wide angle lens so I&rsquo;ll have to experiment a bit, Puget Sound weather permitting.<br /><br />As I was about to walk out the door, I found myself in front of a table full of Agfa Isolette viewfinder cameras. If you want the full specifications of this camera, complete with the universe of reviews written by rank amateurs, then I leave you to the Internet to continue your quest. All I can say is that the shutter appeared to open and close at 1/25, 1/50, and 1/200 second as best that my calibrated eyeballs could surmise, and the lens was still transparent. At $15, the worst that could happen was that I would have a non-functional conversation piece on my desk at my day job. This little relic of the &rsquo;50s also takes 120 format film, which saves me the step of re-rolling 120 film onto a 620 spool should I have purchased the Kodak Brownie sitting on the next table.<br /><br />For less than $100, I walked out of the swap meet with a Mamiya twin lens reflex camera, a great lens, a 46mm orange filter, a 52mm R72 infrared filter for my Fuji S2 Pro digital camera, three rolls of practically worthless film, and a piece of German photographic history. I shot a roll of Ultrafine 100 Plus through my &lsquo;new&rsquo; Mamiya C220f today and the negatives appear very printable. The film advance works as it should and the body is light-tight. I shot Fujicolor 160C film through the Agfa Isolette, so the results will be a few days forthcoming after I get it back from the processor.<br /><br />All in all, a good day for someone who just can&rsquo;t seem to make the great leap into the 21st century, photographically speaking. You just don&rsquo;t get that kind of fun buying the latest digital gadget from a box store.<br />]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>High Quality&#x2c; Low Cost Digital Cameras</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Equipment</category><category>Process</category><dc:date>2010-04-28T19:37:48-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/174d4c4e799985306742a382a0b810a5-20.php#unique-entry-id-20</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/174d4c4e799985306742a382a0b810a5-20.php#unique-entry-id-20</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Every week, I see advertisements for the latest in digital photographic equipment that varies from inexpensive low quality mini-cameras to high-end professional grade instruments. Leaving the low quality cameras on the discount store shelf is a no-brainer, unless you want something you can leave in the glove box of your car to document your next accident. If you want high quality photographs, your options are to risk rapid obsolescence by buying today&rsquo;s latest digital technology, or buy a professional quality film camera from eBay or perhaps a garage sale or local pawn shop. So what does an &ldquo;old school&rdquo; film camera have to do with high quality digital photography? Besides the obvious costs involved, more than you might think.<br /><br />Not even a decade ago, photographs in magazines and exhibitions were created from photographic film exposed in cameras that have changed little in principle for a century. A photograph made with a forty year old Nikkormat or 10 year old Nikon F100 was of better quality than a digital photograph shot through the same lens. Digital imaging technology has improved much since then, but you can still get high quality  digital photographs from a film camera if you let the processor scan and digitize the negatives and slides for you when the film is processed. It doesn&rsquo;t cost much for the casual photographer to get high quality digital images from film. If your volume is low, the cost of the latest digital SLR camera with its dedicated lens is far more than an older film camera using the same optics. If you shoot lots of film, like some folks I know, a quality film scanner can be had for less than $1000. <br /><br />For less than half the cost of a refurbished $1,300 Nikon D300 body, you can get a professional quality Nikon F100 in excellent condition with a 28-35mm Nikon autofocus lens that produces images, when scanned, rival those from any digital camera. If you prefer a mechanical camera like a Nikon FM2, a Minolta SRT 102, or a Canon AE-1, the cost is even less. In case you didn&rsquo;t know, a Nikon lens produced in 1975 will fit the Nikon F100, albeit without autofocus. For the price of a few memory cards, you can get a superb Nikon autofocus or a Canon FD zoom lens. There are thousands of them on the market and most are available for a song. Lenses from other manufacturers, like Pentax or Minolta, cost even less.<br /><br />As a bonus, the photographer also gets low-cost, incorruptible image backups with the negatives and compact discs full of digitized photographs. No corrupt memory cards. No lost image libraries. No missed shots because of dead batteries or faulty electronics, and no confusing menus or settings to fiddle with while awe-inspiring photo-ops slip away.<br /><br />Besides, good photographers can create outstanding images with any camera, even if it is just a light-tight box with a pinhole for a lens.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Sanctuary 32" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/sanctuary-32.jpg" width="450" height="299"/><br /><br />(This image was created with a 35 mm pinhole camera and TMax 100 film)<br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>High Dilution Development</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><category>Process</category><category>Monochrome</category><dc:date>2010-04-18T22:18:39-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/638bff2e0362f1855ba7493a0c48e7c0-19.php#unique-entry-id-19</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/638bff2e0362f1855ba7493a0c48e7c0-19.php#unique-entry-id-19</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I found a post on the APUG website suggesting that Rodinal developer could be diluted far beyond its design limitation to produce images with interesting tonal and textural qualities. I use Rodinal 1:25 for fine grain film, like Plus-X and Maco 100 Plus, to produce monochrome prints with high acutance and just a touch of grain, but after reading about diluting it to 1 part concentrate and 100 parts water, I just had to try it.<br /><br />To create the solution with as little variability as possible, I mixed 10ml of Rodinal concentrate with 500 ml water to create a 1:50 solution. After removing 250 ml of that solution, I replaced it with 250 ml of water for the final 1:100 solution. I let the film sit in the &lsquo;soup&rsquo; for half an hour, agitated the tank slowly three times in a ten-second interval, and then let it sit for another half hour. To stop development, I emptied the tank and then filled it with water and let it rest for another 5 minutes. This lets whatever developer is left to work on the shadow areas whereas stop bath would have stopped development in its tracks. I fixed and washed the negatives in the usual way.<br /><br />Many of the images were lost to poor composition, but the ones I kept were rather extraordinary. I photographed an old diesel engine that I found sitting on a lot and rusting into oblivion. The combination of grain and high contrast gives the images a gritty, industrial feel and exaggerates the lines in the machine, especially on the exposed valve springs. I just &lsquo;feels&rsquo; ancient.<br /><br />I also found some arborists removing a dying tree and photographed them. The camera was a Pentax Spotmatic F. The lens that I used to photograph the engine was a Takumar 50mm f/1.8 and, for the arborists, a Takumar 135mm f/3.5.<br /><br />I wouldn&rsquo;t recommend high dilution development for that once in a lifetime shot, but I was rather pleased with the texture and tonality that I got from the experiment. You will find &lsquo;Where&rsquo;s Waldo&rsquo; and &lsquo;Arborist&rsquo; in the &lsquo;Portrait&rsquo; gallery and &lsquo;Industrial Mortality&rsquo; and &lsquo;Potential Energy&rsquo; in the &lsquo;Ancient Industry&rsquo; gallery.<br /><br />Great fun on a Saturday afternoon!<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Industrial Mortality" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/industrial-mortality.jpg" width="480" height="360"/><br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Submarines</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><category>Gallery</category><category>Military</category><category>Process</category><dc:date>2010-04-11T17:22:04-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/51c2c221d59ecda56df91455e8d9677a-18.php#unique-entry-id-18</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/51c2c221d59ecda56df91455e8d9677a-18.php#unique-entry-id-18</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[The hardest part about shooting submarines is finding them. The Navy likes it that way, but it is frustrating for a photographer with a penchant for photographing military subjects, especially those located in his own back yard.<br /><br />I live just a few miles from the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and the submarine base at Bangor, Washington. My day job has a bit to do with supporting their mission but I still can&rsquo;t get near a sub with a camera without running afoul of Navy security officers. The best I can do is use my imagination while lingering around naval museums and, of course, the mothball fleet.<br /><br />When I took my Minolta SRT-200 for a walk around the Bremerton waterfront, I came across the salvage remains of the decommissioned Sturgeon-class submarine USS Parche (SSN-683) erected as a monument in front of the shipyard gate. &ldquo;Secret Savior&rdquo; places the leading edge of this ship&rsquo;s sail against the mid day sun. I could feel the majesty of this leviathan breaching the surface of the ocean as I framed the image in the viewfinder. &ldquo;Service Record&rdquo; is my favorite of the two. It displays the service history of the Parche using symbology well known to submariners. I rather like the highlights of the dive planes and raised access plates against the dark structure. The grain of Plus-X film processed in Rodinal developer provides a cold and industrial nuance to the image. Also in this gallery are photographs of the World War II veteran USS Bowfin, which is permanently docked at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. I gave these photographs the look of color prints from the 1950s. It was the only way I could salvage them from a lousy exposure.<br /><br />You can see these images in my &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/military.html" rel="self" title="Military">Military</a>&rsquo; gallery. Until I can get access to the submarine mothball docks or stumble onto a &lsquo;boomer&rsquo; passing under the Hood Canal bridge, I have to rely on what I can find within public view at the shipyard, the Naval Undersea Museum at Keyport, or whatever else I can find locally.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Service Record" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/service-record.jpg" width="450" height="299"/><br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Canon AE-1</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Equipment</category><dc:date>2010-04-09T20:22:49-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/47de18ce7bf4bebd46573d75bd4249c4-17.php#unique-entry-id-17</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/47de18ce7bf4bebd46573d75bd4249c4-17.php#unique-entry-id-17</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[When the world began chasing after digital photography, most film cameras were left behind, doomed to abandonment in closets and camera bags by their owners, never to be appreciated again. When digital &lsquo;point-and-shoots&rsquo; and cheap single lens reflex cameras fell within easy reach of the average consumer, the venerable SLR film camera, once revered by advanced amateurs and professionals alike, became like so much baggage. eBay was, and still is, flush with them. As with any market where supply exceeds demand, the prices of these magnificent machines had no where to go but down. Once coveted precision photographic tools were to be had for a song. Enter the bottom feeders.<br /><br />For anyone who has followed this blog or even read my home page, you know that I am committed to preserving 35 mm and medium format film photography. Digital imaging is what I do AFTER I process the film for the sake of this website. I have a rather broad collection of 35 mm cameras and I often enjoy taking them out for a stroll. A few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of running some Fujichrome Velvia through one of my favorites, the Canon AE-1. This camera was a technological breakthrough in 1976 when electronics assumed control of the focal plane shutter in a quality camera built for the consumer market. Deciding on the proper exposure was still a matter of the photographer&rsquo;s judgment, but now electronics controlled the exposure. Canon was one of the first manufacturers to use flexible circuit boards and microchips tightly wrapped in the camera body. These wonderful machines continue to capture great photographs long after the advent of mainstream digital cameras. To discover more about the Canon AE-1, or any of her sisters, visit the Canon F-A-T section of the <a href="http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/photography.htm" rel="external">Photography in Malaysia</a> website. <br /><br />I wonder if my Fuji Finepix S2 Pro will be as relevant in 2044 as my Canon AE-1 is today, 34 years after its introduction? <br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Maritime Destiny" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/maritime-destiny.jpg" width="416" height="416"/><br /> </p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>So Just How Hard Could It Be?</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Website</category><category>Process</category><dc:date>2010-04-05T06:00:57-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/8d9260917797aea9f5d3c294222ffd7e-16.php#unique-entry-id-16</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/8d9260917797aea9f5d3c294222ffd7e-16.php#unique-entry-id-16</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[So just how hard could it be to build a web gallery? You see them all over the web and they vary in quality. I was pushed into building a website about a year and a half ago at the request of the owner of one of my venues, the <a href="http://www.theglobalbean.com/" rel="external">Global Bean Coffee Company</a>.<br /><br />There was a bit of a learning curve. I had to find a web hosting service and learn how to set up the site and the domain. Then there was the web publishing software to find, set up, and learn to use. It&rsquo;s not quite as easy as falling out of bed, but it becomes intuitive after some practice.<br /><br />There are many web hosts available and it wasn&rsquo;t hard to find a reputable one. There are scam artists I&rsquo;m sure, but a bit of research should ferret out the good ones. The software needed to build the site was a different issue. I looked at several, but decided on RapidWeaver offered by <a href="http://www.realmacsoftware.com/" rel="external">Realmac Software</a>. The iWeb software that comes with OS X just wasn&rsquo;t sophisticated enough. You can also download a free version of RapidWeaver. It does everything the licensed version does, but you can only build three web pages which isn&rsquo;t very useful unless all you need is a homepage and two gallery pages.<br /><br />To begin with, RapidWeaver is built for the Apple MacIntosh, which is the platform that I use for the native graphics features in OS X. RapidWeaver is supported by a wide range of theme developers from all over the world. A theme establishes the look and feel of a website. Some are rather plain, but functional. Others are highly customizable, such as the one that I used for this website. I used the PageMix theme from <a href="http://www.multithemes.com/" rel="external">MultiThemes</a>, an Italian developer. They offer themes at quite a reasonable price for what you get. They even have a few simple themes available at no cost that help the neophyte learn how they work.<br /><br />Themes are very helpful, but there are also plug-ins built for RapidWeaver that simplify building web pages. Your Head Software offers a number of plug-ins. My home page was built using the Stacks plug-in and the gallery pages were made with the Collage plug-in. The Method and Resume pages were both built with the Accordion plug-in. All of these plug-ins came from <a href="http://yourhead.com/" rel="external">Your Head</a>. For months, I used the RapidAlbum photo gallery plug-in, which is free from <a href="http://www.smackie.org/" rel="external">Mackie Software</a>. I have never required support from the third party developers, but I needed a bit of help from RealMac once and they were better than any company I have ever dealt with.<br /><br />There is FaceBook and Flickr, but why not try to be more independent? Even if I am the only one who visits the site, at least I know who created it and the domain name is mine to keep as long as I keep it registered.]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>HDR and The Zone System</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><category>Process</category><dc:date>2010-03-14T13:10:01-07:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/12cd8b675324b9916c6f74e86295df32-13.php#unique-entry-id-13</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/12cd8b675324b9916c6f74e86295df32-13.php#unique-entry-id-13</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I set up a new gallery today just for monochrome photographs. Monochrome, otherwise known as &lsquo;black and white&rsquo;,  is my favorite medium because it uses shape and texture to form an image rather than color. Monochrome conveys a feeling of nostalgia or timelessness and communicates mood with form and texture. It is also easier for the &lsquo;analog&rsquo; photographer to control image contrast and tonal width using exposure, chemistry temperature, and development time.<br /><br />While at the Silverdale Art Walk last Friday, a photographer who works with digital processes visited my venue. He explained high dynamic range (HDR) imaging to me. This process involves taking a series of digital photographs using successively low to high exposure values. I assume that those exposures are 1/3 to a full stop apart from each other. Using Adobe Photoshop, the RAW format images are blended together so that the lowest exposure values can be printed closer to the highest exposure values to minimize darkened shadows or blown-out highlights, thereby controlling contrast. This requires expensive high-end digital equipment, computers, and imaging software to create the final print.<br /><br />The Zone System, developed by Ansel Adams, produces a similar effect. Density values on developed film range from Zone I, or pure black on the finished print, to Zone X which is pure white. Zone V is middle grey. Each zone is different from the next by one exposure value, or f-stop. By exposing the shadows at about Zone V and decreasing development time, a photographer can do essentially the same thing. The increased exposure brings out the details normally hidden in the shadows while the reduced development prevents details in the highlights from blowing out into Zone X, or pure white in the final print. Although this process was developed for sheet film, a photographer can make a series of exposures at various exposure values on roll film and choose the best image from the scan or contact sheet. Each film formulation is different so it takes a bit of experimentation to find the right exposure/development combination for a particular film. Modern film quality is consistent, so one roll of Plus-X film will behave like another roll of Plus-X film under the same exposure and development combination.<br /><br />Although I have never used the HDR method, I can practice the Zone System with a film camera, a daylight processing tank, standard chemistry, a Nikon scanner, and my Macbook Pro. Best of all, I don&rsquo;t have to worry about my hard earned money fading into obsolescence when the next digital innovation hits the market.<br /><br />Not better, just different. I do wonder just how long a digital image will last over time, however.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Sawmill-2" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/sawmill-2.jpg" width="385" height="251"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Silverdale Art Walk</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Exhibits</category><category>Gallery</category><dc:date>2010-02-27T06:15:42-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0efb6291b4a52896a8cd8cf9b0079643-12.php#unique-entry-id-12</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0efb6291b4a52896a8cd8cf9b0079643-12.php#unique-entry-id-12</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I rather like the <a href="http://www.oldtownartwalk.com/" rel="external">Silverdale Art Walk</a>. Local merchants in the Old Town Silverdale area jury the work of local artists to display in their establishments. There are hors d'oeuvres and sometimes even wine tasting. It gives local unknowns, like yours truly, a chance to show their work to a broad audience while the sponsoring merchants promote their businesses. There are painters, sculptors, photographers, sketchers, and multi-media artists scatters throughout the area. It&rsquo;s one of my favorite venues.<br /><br />My work will be exhibited at <a href="http://waterfrontbakery.com/" rel="external">Monica&rsquo;s Waterfront Bakery & Caf&eacute;</a> near the waterfront park. I shot a number of images while I was in the DC area last year so I will have a few of those on display along with some of my other favorites. Some are monochrome and some are color. Some will be framed and some will be simply matted. I will also have a number of my &lsquo;minis&rsquo; available for sale.<br /><br />The show is on Friday, March 12, beginning at 6:00 pm. If you can make it, please come. You may find pleasant surprises that are not on my website. At the other venues you will certainly see art that has nothing to do with photography.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/capitolregion.html" rel="self" title="Capitol Region"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Red White Blue" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/red-white-blue.jpg" width="160" height="160"/></a>  <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/ancientIndustry.html" rel="self" title="Ancient Industry"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Staples" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/staples.jpg" width="238" height="157"/></a>  <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/military.html" rel="self" title="Military"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Tip of The Spear" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/tip-of-the-spear.jpg" width="107" height="161"/></a></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Infrared Anyone?</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><category>Equipment</category><dc:date>2010-02-20T22:15:44-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0b6f8d0f3a69eeebd0fb86be46993966-11.php#unique-entry-id-11</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0b6f8d0f3a69eeebd0fb86be46993966-11.php#unique-entry-id-11</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[Following a good suggestion, I decided to add a <a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/naturalfx.html" rel="self" title="Natural FX">new gallery</a> to VoV.  The images come from a Fuji Finepix S2 Pro digital SLR. I bought this camera a few years ago thinking that I would instantly fall in love with digital photography. Although it is more convenient and much faster than traditional film photography, I seem to revert to the older, yet more familiar, technology. By attaching an R72 filter to the lens, I found that I can get surreal false color images from light recorded in the near infrared spectrum, that is from wavelengths of 720 nanometers or longer. The composition of these images is not my best, but I like how the camera&rsquo;s CCD sensor interprets the color of full foliage and non-living subjects. Trees and grass appear as snowy masses tinted blue or light purple while steel and concrete appear in copper or blue-grey tones. Of course the images can also be monochrome, but sometimes the unusual colors of digital infrared images are more intriguing.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Ghost Ship" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/ghost-ship.jpg" width="385" height="257"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Why The Bother?</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Process</category><category>Equipment</category><dc:date>2010-02-13T21:33:11-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/6ab653d179740783115e5ae5ad39fdcb-10.php#unique-entry-id-10</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/6ab653d179740783115e5ae5ad39fdcb-10.php#unique-entry-id-10</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[It seems that most photography that I see on the web or displayed in local exhibits began as a digital image. If you see a photograph on the web it has to be digital, but some do not start that way. I see many people with digital cameras taking pictures and publishing them on a website somewhere, like Flickr, Picasa, or Facebook. The photographs that you see on this website are also digital images, but most of them came from scanned &lsquo;analog&rsquo; slides or negatives.<br /><br />Firing the shutter on a camera is just the first step. If you are a digital photographer, the images still need to be downloaded into a computer and then manipulated somehow with Photoshop or similar software. The result can be surreal dreamlike images, false colors, absurd composites, mosaics, or other fragments of the photographer&rsquo;s imagination. Sometimes digital images are only cleaned up a bit. The color is adjusted or the edges sharpened. These manipulations can culminate into a work of art, but somehow I think a photograph that begins as a digital image is a derivative of photography that I would rather not explore, at least not yet.<br /><br />I shoot slides or monochrome print film most of the time. Occasionally I&rsquo;ll shoot color print film, but I prefer the saturated reds, blues, and yellows of chromes, also known as slide film. Chromes are predicable. As long as the film is fresh, Velvia 100 from one batch looks very much like Velvia 100 from another batch. Monochrome film on the other hand, holds a special fascination for me.<br /><br />Forrest Gump could have said that monochrome photographs are like a box of chocolates. You never know just what you&rsquo;ll get. A lot depends on the film and developer combinations. Some of it depends on the temperature of the developer, how the film is exposed, or the length of time that the film is in the &lsquo;soup&rsquo;. Medium format film, of the 120 or 220 types, gives better definition and finer grain than 35mm negatives can on the same emulsion, but often the characteristic grain of 35mm film contributes to the texture and quality of the resulting photograph and the statement that the photographer is trying to make. <br /><br />Digital? It is very predictable. It is static. It begs to be manipulated post-production. Digital photography is a legitimate art form, but it is not what I consider authentic. I need a certain level of random variability to make photography exciting. It is one thing to get instant gratification seconds after an image is shot, but it is quite another to savor the anticipation of what I think I have captured on film compared to the photograph that is really on the negative. In one instance, I kinked and damaged a roll of 35mm Fomapan 100 because I had a hard time winding it on the processing reel when I processed it. To make matters worse, the film had doubled up on the reel and the emulsion surfaces of the film contacted each other and stuck together during development, leaving only a few printable frames. Winter Rails was on that roll. It remains one of my favorite prints.<br /><br />That&rsquo;s why I bother.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Winter Rails" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/winter-rails.jpg" width="384" height="384"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Aircraft Carrier</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><category>Military</category><dc:date>2010-02-08T10:37:06-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/1866320c5bfa265beef1aaab204fabb6-9.php#unique-entry-id-9</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/1866320c5bfa265beef1aaab204fabb6-9.php#unique-entry-id-9</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[You may notice several photographs of ships and aircraft carriers in the &lsquo;Military&rsquo; gallery. Bremerton hosts part of the Navy&rsquo;s &lsquo;mothball fleet&rsquo;, also known as the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. It is home to the aircraft carriers USS Ranger (CV 61), USS Independence (CV 62), USS Constellation (CV 64) and, most recently, USS Kitty Hawk (CV 63). These ships have been decommissioned until they are needed again, dismantled for parts, or scrapped. Some ships are fortunate enough be at least aesthetically restored to become floating museums, like the USS Turner Joy in Bremerton or the USS Missouri in Pearl Harbor. <br /><br />Over the years I have served on three of these majestic warships, the exception being the Hawk, which are moored only a few miles from my home. The light changes often in the Pacific Northwest. It can be raining one moment and sunny the next. The color and quality of this light striking the hulls of these magnificent vessels keeps bringing me back. Each time I visit, I imagine myself back on the 04 level as a &lsquo;shooter watching aircraft streak away as they are catapulted into the dark night sky. I also remember a tragic early morning fire in November 1983 as one of Ranger&rsquo;s main machinery rooms exploded into violent chaos. That morning was the first time that I had ever seen the interior of a ship&rsquo;s main space,  or what I could see of it. Filled with thick black smoke and backlit by the dull orange glow of burning fuel, the canvas jacket of a two and a half inch fire hose was my hand rail. I followed it down into the belly of a ship in agony to swing a brass fire nozzle at a raging fiery beast.<br /><br />Color slides bring out the hues of grey and blue reflected on the water against the lights on the pier or the colors of the sun settling over Sinclair Inlet. In &lsquo;Modern Maidenhead&rsquo;, rain wears paint into long blue-grey streaks down the faded grey hull of Indy. &lsquo;Connie&rsquo; contrasts a faded grey anchor with rusty highlights nestled into the contour of her bow against the equally worn hull of the Ranger. The red hues of the rusty anchor would have been lost in a monochrome image. Likewise, the red band of an oil boom stretched against Indy&rsquo;s bow  in &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/military.html" rel="self" title="Military">Tip of The Spear</a>&rsquo; would have been nearly invisible in black and white.<br /><br />Monochrome prints bring out the curvaceous lines that come together at the bow of a ship or the menacing rows of hooks in the concertina wire that deter unwelcome entry to the pier. The curve of an oil boom pushing against the bow of Indy gives angular contrast to the curve of the bow reflected against the water. Grey tones provide structure to an image that is less obvious in a color image. The radar domes, the square and angular protrusions that transition the Hawk&rsquo;s wide flight deck to the slender curve of its hull at the water line, and the chains and power lines that traverse the ships and pier give &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/military.html" rel="self" title="Military">Islands</a>&rsquo;  an obvious industrial feel.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Critical Assets" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/critical-assets.jpg" width="386" height="275"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Industrial Baltimore</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><dc:date>2010-02-04T21:34:46-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/eaf948a9722e513bc3e5b0263798c400-7.php#unique-entry-id-7</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/eaf948a9722e513bc3e5b0263798c400-7.php#unique-entry-id-7</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[One of my favorite places to shoot is Baltimore. Although access to this marvelous city is not so easy since I returned home, I learned much about Baltimore&rsquo;s contributions to industry, and ultimately our quality of life. In addition to the legendary advancements in transportation, railroads in particular, the first practical refrigerator was invented in Baltimore. &lsquo;Off the rack&rsquo; clothing was developed by Joseph Banks in Baltimore. Edgar Allen Poe lived and died in Baltimore. Paint. Skin cream. Neon lights. Industries involving canning, printing, metalworking, cargo-handling, ship-building, transportation, food processing, baking, machine tooling, banking, pharmaceuticals, and public utilities if not invented in Baltimore were perfected or industrialized there. It is truly a fascinating place for an engineer or someone old enough to &lsquo;remember the day when . . . &rsquo;<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Immortalized Obsolescence" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/immortalized-obsolescence.jpg" width="385" height="308"/><br /><br />With the exception of a few photographs shot with Fuji&rsquo;s Velvia 100, I used monochrome film throughout my adventure. I tend to favor railroad subjects, but I also enjoyed wandering through industrial museums, historic sites like Fort McHenry, and famous landmarks like the Bromo Seltzer Tower and Baltimore&rsquo;s Inner Harbor. Monochrome gives images of our history an ethereal quality. Velvia film is warm enough to give the color images a warm and familiar feel. Perhaps it is because gas or incandescent lighting was popular way back when. <br /><br />Part of the experience of using film is seeing what happens next after it is processed. How did the grain in the negative contribute to the texture of the print? Was the depth of field too deep or too shallow? How did the colors in the viewfinder translate into the monochrome tones that I saw in my mind&rsquo;s eye? Did the HC-110 developer work better than the Edwal FG7? Did the Rodinal developer bring out just enough grain and acutance in the negative without too much contrast? <br /><br />All part of the adventure.<br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>East Coast Adventure</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><category>Assignments</category><dc:date>2010-01-27T17:06:12-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0865b7f3a421b7a8068031dd0a0c6067-6.php#unique-entry-id-6</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/0865b7f3a421b7a8068031dd0a0c6067-6.php#unique-entry-id-6</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I finished processing the last of the film that I shot since August. I shot full programmed automatic on a few which worked, but did not work on others. Cameras are easily fooled. I trusted my judgment on full manual with good results. Most of the &lsquo;keepers&rsquo; can be found in the &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/military.html" rel="self" title="Military">Military</a>&rsquo;, &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/railroad.html" rel="self" title="Railroad">Railroad</a>&rsquo;, and &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/capitolregion.html" rel="self" title="Capitol Region">Capitol Region</a>&rsquo; galleries, but there are others in &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/ancientIndustry.html" rel="self" title="Ancient Industry">Ancient Industry</a>&rsquo; and &lsquo;<a href="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/gallery/portrait.html" rel="self" title="Portrait">Portrait</a>&rsquo;.<br /><br />I had a great deal of satisfaction touring the cradle of our nation while I was away on my &lsquo;day job&rsquo;. I wish that I could print those shots that were ruined by technical guffaws, but such is &lsquo;analog&rsquo; photography. ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Railroads</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><category>Monochrome</category><dc:date>2010-01-22T06:22:13-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/2310ff1e240fb3f450bf95752188579a-5.php#unique-entry-id-5</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/2310ff1e240fb3f450bf95752188579a-5.php#unique-entry-id-5</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[The Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad Museum is an amazing place for anyone who loves railroads and railroad memorabilia. From the earliest demonstration locomotive to the great steaming giants, the B&O museum begins with the very spot where the first mile and a half of commercial railroad was built. <br /><br />I shot a lot of monochrome there because that is how to shoot the Age of Steam. The 20th Century Limited. The Capitol Limited. The Empire Builder. That was the way to travel in style back in &lsquo;the day&rsquo;.  People used to dress up to travel on the rails. Champagne. Smoking cars. You don&rsquo;t just get to your destination. You arrive.<br /><br />Today we are reduced to long lines and security checkpoints. Blue jeans full of holes. Tattooed teenagers and young adults also full of holes. United. Continental. Delta. Get in line. Get on the plane. Sit in a space no larger than a typical office chair, but without the leg room. Get off the plane. Stand in line to watch the parade of luggage, praying that yours will be there. So much for the romance of travel.<br /><br />Take a look in the Railroad gallery. More will be coming.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Leading Edge" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/leading-edge.jpg" width="386" height="251"/><br /></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Washington DC</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Gallery</category><dc:date>2010-01-18T09:08:41-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/2f2875a1fa85aa11fb49a0ed7dfe0c7a-4.php#unique-entry-id-4</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/2f2875a1fa85aa11fb49a0ed7dfe0c7a-4.php#unique-entry-id-4</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[After processing the many rolls of film that have accumulated over the last several months, it became obvious that I would need to create at least one new gallery. Late last year, my day job required that I spend much of 2009 in the Washington DC area. I worked in Annapolis, but I did have time on the weekends to explore the region where our nation grew its roots. Processing film in a hotel room is impractical at best and my scanners wouldn&rsquo;t fit in my carry-on luggage so I left my darkroom at home. I simply mailed the exposed film back to my understanding wife to throw in the freezer until I could get to it.<br /><br />Most tourists visiting our nation&rsquo;s capitol photograph the many museums and monuments and I was no exception. For the night shots, I used both color and monochrome. For shooting structures, I use monochrome film to highlight the tones and lines of the masonry. Color film was best for capturing the red, white, and blue colors that symbolize the United States. <br /><br />It&rsquo;s good exercise to walk around DC and Baltimore lugging around a Domke bag full with a Mamiya M645, three lenses, film, and the usual accessories. It keeps my massage therapist in business anyway.<br /><br />I still have several rolls of film to work through, so more galleries may pop up. It is a work in progress.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Metro Itinerary" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/metro-itinerary.jpg" width="384" height="285"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Trabant</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><dc:date>2010-01-14T22:24:02-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/ad6e2bd616e59303a96464ce5c42d666-3.php#unique-entry-id-3</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/ad6e2bd616e59303a96464ce5c42d666-3.php#unique-entry-id-3</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I happened upon a Trabant convention at the International Spy Museum in our nation&rsquo;s capitol. This vestige of communist industrialism has become a cult favorite among immigrants of the former East Germany. Two cylinders. Four passengers. Freedom for the oppressed. Babe magnet. Certainly a curiosity, especially in Washington DC.<br /><br />The owners of these little wonders are a passionate lot. One of them drove his communist conveyance all the way from Indiana to the convention. When I asked him how he found parts to restore his car, he said that he has a cousin in the former East Germany who was more than willing to help out. I wonder how he could handle a road emergency without carrying a trailer full of spark plugs, belts, hoses, and other hardware? Then again, the engine has only 7 moving parts so that may be a moot point.<br /><br />Even though the Trabant is capable of highway speeds, I don&rsquo;t think it would be much of a match for a modern SUV vying for its physical space at that speed.<br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Trabant-1" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/trabant-1.jpg" width="386" height="275"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title>Aberdeen Proving Ground</title><dc:creator>tim@visionsofvocation.com</dc:creator><category>Assignments</category><category>Military</category><dc:date>2010-01-10T15:49:36-08:00</dc:date><link>http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/e85602e4da23320bd950e3f530126b6d-2.php#unique-entry-id-2</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/e85602e4da23320bd950e3f530126b6d-2.php#unique-entry-id-2</guid><content:encoded><![CDATA[I spent five months on the east coast of the United States last year, and I have finally started to process the film that I have had to keep in the freezer. I am pleased with a few frames that I took at the Army Ordnance Museum at the Aberdeen Proving Ground. You can find &ldquo;Grim Messenger&rdquo;,&rdquo; Leopard Skin&rdquo;, and &rdquo;Study In Grey&rdquo; in the military gallery. More to come as time permits. <br /><br /><p style="text-align:center;"><img class="imageStyle" alt="Study in Grey" src="http://www.visionsofvocation.com/Blog/files/study-in-grey.jpg" width="385" height="270"/></p>]]></content:encoded></item></channel>
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