Professional Camera Settings

Random photo-related musings along with my joys and woes as a photographer trying to manage teaching, making photos, family, and life.
Back in October, my family took a 6-day, 2500 mile road trip through North Dakota, into Yellowstone, down through the Tetons, and back home through South Dakota. I brought some film that expired in 2013, and I shot it with my Canon AE-1 Program that's older than me that I've had since I was 17 years old. The resulting images are somewhere between "art" and "touristy" photos (I think)...
[click each image to enlarge]
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 2:53 PM 0 comments
Labels: Camera, Film, Prettiness
I'm never going to see the "auto focus / manual focus" switch the same after this...
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 5:15 PM 0 comments
Here's a 0:30 video of a unique process for making some camera/skeleton art from CarlNeedsAJob on Instagram:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 9:29 PM 0 comments
We've had a few successful days of processing film in class this week:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 10:04 PM 0 comments
Labels: Camera, Concordia University, Darkroom, Film, Video
A Lego Ambassador shared this sweet 3-in-1 camera lego set that's coming out in a few weeks:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 10:26 PM 0 comments
... but this happened instead:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 8:48 PM 0 comments
My students are currently shooting a project on 35mm film. So I came to class like this last week ready to hand out cameras to everyone:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 6:29 PM 0 comments
Labels: Camera, Concordia University, Selfie, Teaching
I start a new semester teaching at Concordia University tomorrow, and then the University of Minnesota next week. Here's a pic from the end of last semester when I was collecting the last 35mm cameras from my students to return to my office:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 3:44 PM 0 comments
Labels: Camera, Concordia University, Selfie, Teaching
I saw this image on the web and had to investigate:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 2:03 PM 0 comments
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 1:07 PM 0 comments
I miss working with my Holga. And when we went to "remote learning" last year, I had to scrap my Holga-based project in my Advanced Photo class. Anyway, here are some fun "Holga quotes" I found on FreestylePhoto:
"Take your Holga out for a ride. Stop often. Play."
- Kit Frost, Professional Photographer
"Mechanically the Holga is simplicity itself. The nature of the Holga places emphasis on seeing, thinking, and interacting with the environment at hand."
- Joe Ostraff, Professor, BYU
"The Holga summons up Dadaist traditions of chance, surprise, and willingness to see what can happen."
- Robert Hirsch, Photographic Historian, in his book Photographic Possibilities
"As for the Holga, I like using it and making my students use it, because it encourages the photographer to concentrate on his/her relationship with the subject without technology getting in the way. The resulting images depend on the photographer's presence (of mind and body)."
- Lesley Krane, educator at California State University, Northridge
"As the Koordinator of the Krappy Kamera Competition, I've seen thousands of images produced with this camera. I am always awed by the variety of images that can be produced with such minimal equipment."
- Sandy Carrion, Coordinator of the Krappy Kamera Competition
"I still have the first Holga I ever bought back in 1988. I loved it then and still do, especially with black and white film."
- Julia Dean, founder of the Julia Dean Photographic Workshops
"I love my Holgas and I have eight of them. As a designer and art director, I have used Holga cameras on many photo shoots and clients love the different effects!"
- Randy Thomas, Founder, Randy Thomas Design Agency
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 12:29 PM 0 comments
Here are some great photography-based tshirt from Luta:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 11:15 AM 0 comments
There are many instances of pinhole cameras being formed in darkened rooms to project the outside on a far wall. (Abelardo Morell has done work like this for example.) Two days ago, someone on Reddit shared what was happening with their curtains, and it was pretty fun:
The curtains in my room create a "natural" pinhole camera that projects images of the street below onto my ceiling from r/woahdude
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 9:03 PM 0 comments
Here's a short video sharing different shutter speed sounds over the years:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 5:45 PM 0 comments
Here's an excerpt from a press release from the University of Hertfordshire from last week:
A photograph thought to be the longest exposure image ever taken has been discovered inside a beer can at the University of Hertfordshire’s Bayfordbury Observatory.
The image was taken by Regina Valkenborgh, who began capturing it towards the end of her MA Fine Art degree at the University of Hertfordshire in 2012. It shows 2,953 arced trails of the sun, as it rose and fell between summer and winter over a period of eight years and one month. The dome of Bayfordbury’s oldest telescope is visible to the left of the photograph and the atmospheric gantry, built halfway through the exposure, can be seen from the centre to the right.
Check out this Fairchild K-17 aerial camera from the 1940s:
While these cameras were normally clamped into mounts, a pair of handles and a viewfinder could be fitted to K-17s and K-18s for hand-held operation. What “hand-held” meant is subject to interpretation, as these cameras were not lightweights. With a 200 foot roll of film, the A-5 film magazine used with the K-17 weighed 30 pounds. A complete K-17 with 12″ lens cone and a full magazine weighed about 55 pounds. With a 24″ lens instead of the 12″, the weight climbed to near 75 pounds.
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 4:29 PM 0 comments
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