Now last week you saw some images of the outside of Reichstag, this week I will show you some images from inside the Dome. I also thought that these images should go with a bit less grain.
And it was a really tough decision for me since I like this weeks side prints as much as I like the one I decided to be the image of the week. Maybe I should have splitted them up to cover three weeks, but that would have been too much Reichstag. So here is this weeks image and also give the side print a closer look.
Compared to last weeks images you can see how different lith prints may come out with a little bit different setup of the developer and a different paper.
During this years summer vacation we also visited Munich. And there we went to Pinakothek der Moderne where besides all the art work I was also interested in the architecture of the building itself.
Unfortunately I was not allowed to take my little Gorillapod in because tripods were not allowed - no matter how small they are. At some places people are really serious about rules, but at least I was allowed to photograph. So I had to find locations where I could sit down the little Zero2000 to take the image which was quite a bit of restriction.
This weeks photograph shows one of those images where a tripod would have made it much easier. So the camera was sitting on a balustrade and leaning at a wall. I was fortunate that I could do the image without camera shake.
All images shown in this post are lith prints on Fomatone MG FB. The first side print shows the same negative as this weeks image, but with not enough exposure, so the blacks went a bit too deep. This weeks image is the second try on that negative, this time with more exposure and the lith developer aged by one print. That resulted in a much more colorful image. And I think the color very much supports the subject.
The other side prints show the entrace to the building (well, one entrance to the building) and the ceiling of the main hall, with the camera again sitting on a balustrade.
This week I do not have any side prints, just the image of the pier which I photographed while having a stop in Lindau at Lake Constance.
As in the weeks before, a lith print on Fomatone MG FB.
This is an image of the Berlin Airlift Memorial. If you want to know more about it and why it is there: Click!
A bit late this week, I know.
This is the left over from an evening with friends - snacks and it took all of my self-control to wait the 14 minutes for the pinhole exposure.
I did some kallitypes of the heliopsis negative I showed weeks ago. So I thought about doing this negative also as a kallitype. Unfortunately it was not developed in my favourite developer for negatives which will end as kallitypes. The contrast was not high enough and I had to use a kallitype developer which increases contrast but disappoints tonality. Note to self: Next time think first!
Today the door bell rang and my daughter opened. I just heard that she was talking and that is was the postman. Then she called me that there is a small package for me. "Who is it from?" I asked and she responded something that sounded like "blurb" Well, I almost told her not to talk while eating ... But then it really was a package for me from - "blurb".
Never heard of them but remembered that a friend told me that he is going to send something. Since we often talk about photography and from the size of the package I thought it might be a pile of images. But then I got a really nice surprise. He took all the content from my blog and produced a nice litte book. Very nice. And, if I would not see it in front of me I would not believe it, the print quality of the images is really good. And also the rest is good. Great job.
Thank you! Crazy Craig! The one and only reader of my blog.
The book is about week 1-26 and now I am even more motivated to make it through the rest of the year.
This week I wanted to present my new toy, a 4×5 field camera - yes, sometimes I use cameras with lenses. The good thing about the 4×5 is that you need not to take 12 or 36 images to get to the result. Just one image and you can develop it. But I am not really convinced if this image really counts. It is not a scanned print. It is a scanned negative.
Usually I develop 6 sheets of film together in a Jobo 2500 tank or one sheet alone in a tray. The reasons are obvious, if you have more than one sheet of film in the tray you will need to move them and shuffle them around, bring the bottom one to the top etc. and all that can do no good to the negatives. Well, this time I tried my luck and developed two sheets in a tray. And this time I learned my lesson the hard way because it resulted in a concert of scratches all over my negatives. So I decided to go the - for me unusual - negative scanning route. And I imediately remembered why I like working in the darkroom so much more than working on the computer.