When to Start That "Dream Project"
This is too real...
Random photo-related musings along with my joys and woes as a photographer trying to manage teaching, making photos, family, and life.
This is too real...
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 7:29 PM 0 comments
Labels: Funny, Inspiration
We had a great few days in the darkroom recently. Over 2 days, we had a 100% success rate with 11 rolls processed!
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 2:23 PM 0 comments
Labels: Concordia University, Darkroom, Film, Teaching
My son and I were in the horticulture building before it was open on the opening day of the Minnesota State Fair last Thursday. I was entering cherry tomatoes (I ended up earning a 3rd place ribbon!), and the drop off was 6:30 a.m. through 9 a.m. when the building itself didn’t open to the public until after that.
So we had the opportunity to do something amazing: look at the “crop art” with NO ONE else around! Usually that room has a huge line, and it’s packed with viewers during normal fair hours! Here are a few pics:
[click each image to enlarge]
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 10:44 AM 0 comments
Labels: Dorothea Lange, Funny, Of Local Interest
In a report that went out on Monday, Kodak noted that their gross profit fell about 12%, or $7 million, declining from $58 million in the second quarter of 2024 to $51 million in the second quarter of 2025, and that it had upcoming debt obligations that need to be fulfilled within the next year. There were concerns that Kodak would disappear.
Kodak pushed back, releasing a statement that they have no plans to cease operations.
One of the photo-based Facebook groups I'm a part of shared this tongue-in-cheek post:
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 7:09 PM 0 comments
We got back from a trip to Hawaii earlier this month, and I brought my Holga along. I just shot 1 roll, and here are a handful of photos from it.
[click each image for a larger version]
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 4:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: Holga, Prettiness
Photography seems to be the most literary of the graphic arts.- Walker Evans
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 9:45 PM 0 comments
Labels: Quote, Walker Evans
I started reading this biography on a trip this past winter:
Most of Lange's photography was optimistic, even utopian, not despite but precisely through its frequent depictions of sadness and deprivation. By showing her subjects as worthier than their conditions, she called attention to the incompleteness of American democracy. And by showing her subjects as worthier than their conditions, she simultaneously asserted that greater democracy was possible.
The camera's capacity to replicate what the eye can see made it appear, originally, to be the ultimate documentary tool. It seemed to be a machine for exact replication, its products machine-made, until the myriad means of constructing photographs were widely understood. Invented just as art steered toward expressing a subjective vision, an individual inner consciousness, the camera seemed limited to representing that which is visible to the naked eye. Honoré Daumier said that "photography described everything and explained nothing." Photographers engaged in some self-delusion along these lines; Walker Evans called documentary "a stark record ... [of] actuality untouched." Lange did not fuss about exact representation in her photography. Her experience as a portrait photographer left her at ease in retouching an errant hand or shadow, in asking her subjects to move to a different spot or position. Like an historian, she wanted her photographs to emphasize what she saw as the main point and to prevent her viewers from being distracted by details. In her portrait studio she wanted to reveal the inner, not the outer, life and character of her subjects, and she continued the search for hidden truths in her documentary work.
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 9:53 PM 0 comments
Labels: Book, Dorothea Lange, Quote, Walker Evans
I explained what was happening in my last blog post in a recent social media post:
Last month, I did a medium format film / camera demo in my Photo II / Advanced Photo class. I sighed and mentioned a “trend” of not actually shooting with the camera, but instead pointing the camera at your subject and then getting a photo of the ground glass with your phone. After the demo, many students made photos of themselves in that manner using my cameras. 🙄🤷🏼♂️
This morning, I stepped outside and tried it myself for the first time (with an old Mamiya twin lens reflex), and made photos of our flowering tree and a pair of tulips in our garden. My students would be proud… I think…
Posted by Steve Stenzel at 10:44 AM 0 comments
Labels: Film, iPhone, Prettiness
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