4x5 Large Format · Film photography · Photography

Large format difficulties

I had a day off work yesterday and decided that I would take my Chamonix 045N-1 for a second outing. After my initial test a couple of weeks or so back, I felt confident enough to take a slightly longer trip out into the Peak District. By some miracle, the weather was actually good too – warm, with plenty of sunshine and cloud. There was a risk of rain predicted but not until later in the day.

My initial plan had been to visit a few locations but, in the end, I only went to a single spot as I soon discovered that, despite everything else, there was still sand in the gears (not literally!).

I drove out to Surprise View car park in order to photograph Mother Cap, a large gritstone outcrop, and then to photograph the birch woodland in the same area. Although Mother Cap isnt too far from the car park, it is quite a bit higher and the footpath requires some scrambling over rocks – nothing too challenging, but still enough to work up a sweat when you’re carrying a big tripod and a heavy backpack.

The first two shots went well, I thought, although I found focusing a little difficult because I had fitted a yellow filter to the lens (note to self, focus before fitting the filter enxt time). As it turned out, I managed to get some camera shake on the first shot, probably because the tripod was stood on springy heather covered ground and wasn’t stable enough.

The next shot was taken on firmer ground but the issues with the filter meant that there are a few minor focusing problems where I hadn’t set the camera movements as well as I might. It was at this point that my cable release also broke, the threading on the end somehow coming undone slightly, so the next shot had to be taken using the shutter release on the lens without the benefit of the cable. It was at 1/60sec though, so it came out ok. I’ll post these two pictures tomorrow.

The final shot I took was of the birch woodland. This time the camera was placed in a stable spot, and I managed to finagle the cable release enough that it functioned properly again (although I’ll be using a different one in future AND taking a spare). Despite this, a new problem came to bear…

Because it was a warm day with hot sunshine, and because I was quite hot from hiking around with my gear, I now found that beiing under the darkcloth for more than about ten seconds resulted in my spectacles completely steaming up, rendering any attempt to focus of check the scene nigh on impossible (and made even more difficult by the yellow filter).

I did my best with it, but it wasn’t good enough, and the resultant image has a number of problems with soft focus in various parts of te scene. Thankfully it’s not terrible, but it’s not what I wanted. I do like the resulting picture though and it might be worth another visit to try and get a technically better result.

Here it is. It probably looks fine on a small screen, but it loses a lot of sharpness when viewed large.

At the edge of the birch wood

Chamonix 045N-1. Fujinon NW 135mm f/5.6 & Fomapan 100. Ilfotec DD-X 1+9 12mins @ 20°

Taken 19 June 2023.

35mm · Film photography · Photography

Trip birch

Eagle-eyed viewers might recognise this scene (and tree) as the same one that I attempted to photograph on large format film. Recognising that there would be a chance that my 4×5 picture might not work out, I took the opportunity to photograph it with the Olympus Trip 35 I also had with me. In fact, while my large format camera took up the bulk of the gear I was carrying, it was finishing the roll of HP5+ in the Trip that was my primary goal.

This one turned out better.

Birch on the moors

Olympus Trip 35 & Ilford HP5+ . Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Taken on 2 January 2023.

4x5 Large Format · Film photography · Photography

When things don’t work out

Yesterday didn’t work out how I’d hoped. My plan was to go out in the afternoon and make some photographs, and that’s what I did. However it was a disappointing experience. Firstly, because the weather was rainy and gloomy in the morning, I had to wait until the afternoon before I could go out (well, I suppose I could have gone out and took some rainy-day pictures in the morning, but that wasn’t what I wanted to do). The weather forecast for the afternoon showed it would be a mixture of sunshine and sunny spells but the reality was that it was largely overcast, with the sun only being visible as a vague disk behind the cloud cover most of the time. This annoyed me – I have a dim view of weather forecasting apps, most of which can’t even seem to show the current weather correctly, much less what it’s going to be like later on or the following day. The untrustworthiness of them is frustrating. However, the weather was what it was and I would have to make the best of it.

I took my Yashicamat 124G, but I was hoping to shoot some more pictures using the Chroma 4×5. I decided to head out to Shireoaks and maybe take a picture of Steetley Chapel before driving to Shireoaks and walking along the Chesterfield Canal to Turnerwood.

I visited the chapel first and spend time setting up my large format gear. I was careful to check the exposure, setting up the correct aperture, shutter speed, making sure the focus was correct, and then checking the shutter was firing as expected before taking the shot. I removed the dark slide, took the picture, and then packed everything up, got in the car and drove to Shireoaks. After parking the car, I set off towards the canal, grumbling under my breath about the poor light that was filtering through the clouds. On top of this a breeze had gotten up, placing ripples ont the surface of the water to kill any reflections and also jeopardising any longer exposures with the big large format camera, whose bellows are great for catching the wind.

When I arrived at Turnerwood I set the camera up for a picture of the lock keepers cottages that sit beside the water there. It’s an attractive location, but the conditions were dull and not particularly flattering. Nevertheless, I got everything ready for the picture. And then I realised something unfortunate…

I became uncomfortably aware that when I’d made the first shot back at Steetley Chapel that, after taking great care to get everything set up properly, I’d then gone and removed the wrong darkslide from the film holder, effectively exposing the sheet of film through the ground glass on the back of the camera rather than through the lens. I could even remember seeing the dark slide moving behind the ground glass as I removed it ferchrissakes! This didn’t help my already low mood, but I decided to take the second shot anyway, making sure that I was using the unexposed sheet of film. I took the shot and then tried to reinsert the dark slide.

It wouldn’t go in.

Instead of sliding true it instead hit some resistance which I’m pretty sure was the sheet of film. After several attempts I came to the realisation that there was nothing else to do but remove the film holder, thereby ruining a second sheet. Great going eh?

I decided to have another attempt at the shot, this time using a remaining sheet of Fomapan 100 that was in another film holder (the other shot on there was of a silver birch tree I photographed in the Peak District a couple of weeks ago). This time all seemed to go well and I was able to reinsert the dark slide correctly and then pack everything away. I took a shot of the scene on the Yashicamat too while I was there, just in case.

I shot another couple of sheets of HP5+ back in Shireoaks and these seemed to work ok with no obvious problems. I’ve not developed these yet though, so who knows?

As I drove home the sun emerged from the clouds and bathed everything in perfect light. Sigh.

I’ve developed the Fomapan sheets today with somewhat mixed results. The Silver Birch picture was largely a write off, having a massive light leak that took out around a third of the image. I’ve attempted a crop, but it’s not great. Partially because it wasn’t what I wanted from the picture and also, from a technical point of view, because I’ve got some unwanted camera movements in there which has done odd things with the plane of focus.

The shot made at Turnerwood was much better, but the light wasn’t great, so it’s a little flat looking. It also has some issues with camera movements – this time some front swing that means the left and right edges have some softness. I’m going to have to pay close attention to these things in future to avoid them creeping into my pictures again.

I also loaded my first sheets of film into the holders today. The camera came with four film holders already loaded with film, so I’ve had to shoot those before getting the chance to load some myself. This also seemed to got well though, thankfully.

More large format cock-ups to come soon no doubt. 🙂

Emergency crop!
Turnerwood

Chroma 4×5. Fujinon NW 135mm f/5.6 & Fomapan 100. Fomadon R09 1+50 9 mins @ 20°

Taken 2 January 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Silver birch re-scan

The photo in today’s post is a few years old – it was taken on a cold, but bright, February day back in 2018 on the edge of the moorland near Surprise View in the Peak District national park. I don’t think I’ve published this picture online anywhere before now.

I re-scanned it, and the rest of the photos on the roll, yesterday, using Vuescan to make a linear RAW DNG file and then Negative Lab Pro for the conversion in Lightroom.

Now I understand how to use NLP properly (or at least much better – there are still a bunch of controls and sliders that I stay away from!), I’m very pleased with the ease of getting colours that I’m happy with almost straight out of the box. I still tweak things a little, first using NLPs controls, and then maybe some minor tweaks in Lightroom itself (usually adding a little clarity and sharpness), but there has been none of the annoying mental gymnastics where I can’t decide if the colours are “off” in some hard to define way.

Obviously, colours are subjective, whether it be someone sat at home trying to get what they think Portra or whatever film stock they’ve used to look “right”, or a technician in a photo-lab making adjustments in the Noritsu software (or whatever it is they use) on the behalf of the photographer. So far, Negative Lab Pro has given me colours that feel correct with very little faff on my part, and for this I am thankful. I love black and white photography, but this new found ability to get results I’m happy with from C41 film is making me want to shoot more of the stuff (and re-scan some of the photos where I had less than satisfactory results in the past). It’s just a shame I need to sell a kidney to afford colour film these days!

Silver birch and quarry scree

Zeiss Mess-Ikonta 524/16 & Kodak Portra 400. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Taken on 7 February 2018

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Birches at Bolehills Quarry

Bolehills Quarry, up above Padley Gorge, is carpeted with lush grass and beautiful silver birch trees. It’s a location that likely suits pretty much any type of conditions. The trees cast stark shadows in bright light and look mysterious in mist. These two shots were made around 9-10am while the sun was still striking long shadows.

I scanned these using EpsonScan, which is not something I normally do with colour photos as I’ve been less than successful at getting nice colours from the results in the past. This time though, I think it’s worked very well. Maybe not perfect – I doubt I’ll ever be sure a colour scan is “perfect” – but still a result I’m very happy with.

The Bolehills birch trees
White trunks cast shadows on green
In the morning sun

Bolehills
Bolehills

Bronica ETRSi, Zenzanon 75mm f/2.8 PE & Kodak Portra 160.

Taken on 6 April 2021

35mm · Film photography · Photography

Birch branches

A super-speedy post today. I had other things I had to do, and not much time to pull a blog post together. So here’s another birch tree (a mini theme with these of late!).

In a rush today
I hope this silver birch tree
Might please my readers

Birch branches

Olympus OM-2N, Zuiko Auto-S 50mm f/1.8 & Ilford HP5+ (@800asa). Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 10mins @ 20°.

Taken on 3 March 2021