Saturday 31 March 2012

It's Hip To Be Square

Portland Downtown to the Max

One day I would love to own a Hasselblad. Or a Rollieflex. Or some other of those great classic medium format cameras that natively take pictures in a square format. I think there is a special elegance to the square as a border for an image. It by no means suits every image bit when it does the image is endowed with a certain strength and solidity.

In his later years the great Ansel Adams shot with a square format Hasselblad camera but almost always with an eye to cropping a final rectangular image out of the frame. Cropping after the fact is always an option but most photographers feel the most fulfilled when they are able to take the frame they see through the viewfinder and nestle a particular scene perfectly inside.

The above picture was taken using my Mamiya M645 Pro medium format camera. It, like all my other cameras, shoots normal rectangular images. The square crop suited this image. I didn't see it when taking it, only later when editing.

The magic of a particular format, however, is that you start to see like it sees once familiar with it. If I want to start taking truly great square images I need a camera that "sees" in square.

Some day.

Wednesday 28 March 2012

Fortune Favours The Bold

Crown Velvia UFO House

There's always time, right? Wrong!

I really like this shot but I almost didn't get it. The bulldozers took this structure away forever just a week ago. The time is now.

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Nothing Says Big Like BIG

Crown Graphic Space Gherkin Ready For Liftoff!

As I get to know the Crown Graphic one thing becomes more and more clear to me. The images are BIGGER. I don't know how to explain that, really. I mean, once I upload it to Flickr or whatever the images are no bigger or smaller than if I had taken them on an iPhone. But somehow that BIGness comes across.

Take this image, for example, which I took on a recent outing with a good friend. In some ways it could have been taken with any camera. However, I just know that if I had been shooting with the F4 or the Mamiya I would not have come away with this image.

No profound explanations this time, just an observation.