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Adobe Photoshop Turns 20

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Webdesigner Depot has put together a nice and informative Adobe Photoshop history. On February 10th the life saver of every web designer and photographer turns 20. The article also includes an interview of John Knoll, one of the original creators of Photoshop.

Photoshop 1.0 on Mac OS 7

Credits: Screenshot by Guidebook gallery.

Project 365: Day 34

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Project 365: 34 / 365

It’s day 34 and in three days I’ll get 10% of my Project 365 done. I’m sort of lacking ideas for photos at the moment. Especially on work days it’s difficult to be innovative because when I get home, it’s already dark outside. I’m hoping to improve my project quality next weekend. Here’s today’s photo which was inspired by my lack of inspiration.

Vintage Folding Camera

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On Saturday we visited an antique fair in Oulu. There were almost 100 exhibitors and sellers and most of them sold vintage dishes (glass, porcelain) and ornaments, and old stamps and postcards. I was hoping to find an old camera and just as I was giving up on hope, I run into this beautiful pocket-size medium format folding camera called Welta Weltax. It was made in Germany after WWII and it’s in full working order.

Welta Weltax folding camera

The camera has a Meyer-Optik Trioplan 1:3.5 / 75 V lens and a Prontor-S shutter. The aperture goes from f/3.5 to f/22 and shutter speeds are from 1/250 seconds to 1 second and bulb. It also has a working self-timer (the red switch on the left side of the lens). The camera uses 120 roll film and originally it has been possible to take both 6×6 and 4.5×6 shots but during the 60+ years the 4.5×6 mask has been lost. I’ve read that it might be impossible to find a suitable mask so I’m going to take 6×6 photos with it. It will also be possible to shoot on 35mm film with it but that requires some DIY action.

Welta Weltax vintage camera

The camera does not meter light so it’s good to have some kind of exposure meter available (proper exposure meter or digital camera). It does not have a rangefinder either so the distance to the object has to be guessed. The focusing ring has options from 1.6 meters to 12 meters and infinity.

On Sunday I shot a test roll with my new beauty and found out that the camera really works. Here are two photos taken with Welta Weltax on Kodak Tri-X 400 roll film.

Kodak Tri-X 400 Kodak Tri-X 400 black and white film

Difficulty: Intermediate

While digital photography gets more and more popular and ordinary, analog photography refuses to die. It’s sticking around although most of the local photography labs and services have given up on film development. Luckily there are still a few places to get your films developed, and many of the smaller local photo labs use the remaining film developing labs as subcontractors.

Check the temperatureOf course one option is to develop films at home. If you develop your films by yourself you are able to control the results more powerfully – you can play around with dilutions, temperatures and developing times (and styles) which all affect on contrast, bokeh and grain, among other things. After practice the developing process is quite easy and with black and white film it’s very affordable. The chemicals you need for developing one black and white film at home will cost you less than 50 cents.

There are many comprehensive tutorials (and even books) about film development available but here’s one more for black and white film with basic steps and information. I’m quite new to this so feel free to comment and ask questions.

You will need:

  • A film developer, for example Agfa Rodinal or Ilford LC 29
  • A film fixer, for example Agfa Agefix (Fix-Ag) or Ilford Rapid Fixer
  • Water for stopping and washing
  • A digital thermometer
  • A film tank and reel (make sure you’ll get one that suits for your film format, usually the same tank/reel set suits for 35mm film and 120 rollfilm)
  • A jug or two with deciliter scale (1-1.5 liters is good)
  • A smaller graduated beaker
  • A room that can be made totally dark, for example a bathroom or storage room without windows

You might also consider getting:

  • A wetting agent, for example Ilford Ilfotol
  • A stopwatch or an smartphone application to track the time. I’m using Time Machine with my Symbian 60 phone.

Tips and good to know:

  • Practicing with a test rollPractice with test roll how to put the film on the reel and into the tank. Once you know how to do it in day light and eyes closed (or in dark room), do it with the real film (in the dark room).
  • Always check the temperatures, dilutions and other information from the bottle label or from manufacturer’s web site.
  • Writing a timeline down beforehand makes it easier to keep up with the durations.
  • Keep the same temperature through the process.
  • The developing time depends on the film, the developer and the temperature. Check the developing time from The Massive Dev Chart, you can search either the film or developer to get the correct developing times. If you want to use a temperature which is not mention in the dev chart, you can use Ilford’s table (download PDF) to convert the developing times. For example, if the dev chart instructs to use developing time of 10 minutes in 20°C, but you want to use 24°C water, the Ilford table helps you to convert the developing time to 7 minutes for 24°C water.
  • Some film developers can be used more than once but not all. Same with fixers.
  • After fixing the film, the film should be washed for 15-20 minutes. It is recommended to wash the film under running water. But instead I have filled the tank, shaked it for 20-30 seconds and swapped the water to fresh (and continued this for 15-20 minutes).

The basic developing process:

  1. 12ml of Agfa RodinalPut the film on a film reel and into the tank in total darkness. I’m using our storage room in the basement for this.
  2. Pour the diluted film developer (20-24°C) into the tank.
  3. Agitate (turn upside down and back) the tank for the first 30 seconds and then for 5 seconds every 30 seconds.
  4. Pour the film developer out of the tank.
  5. Wash the film for 1-2 minutes (water into the tank, shake and water out x 3-4 times).
  6. Pour the film fixer into the tank.
  7. Agitate the tank for the first 30 seconds and then for 5 seconds every 30 seconds.
  8. Wash the film for 15-20 minutes.
  9. If you want, you can use a wetting agent after the final wash. Let the film soak in the diluted wetting agent for 1-2 minutes and then hang the film without washing it with water.
  10. Hang the film to dry. Use something as a weight so that the film dries straight.

You can pour the chemicals down the drain with lots of water.

Films are drying Clips are weights

High Key

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Tonight, while making evening tea, I tried the high key style (see Wikipedia). I took the photo with digital SLR, Nikon D80, and a manual Nikon Series E 50mm f/1.8 AI-S lens. Aperture was f/5.6 and exposure time was 1/200. In addition I used two flashguns: Nikon SB-28 at 24mm on camera, firing @ 1/32 upwards to the ceiling, and Nikon SB-80dx with a diffuser behind the table, on the floor at 14mm, firing @ 1/4 upwards.

Making tea