Instances on Maui

I recently returned from a month working on the humanitarian crisis left in the aftermath of the Lahaina Fire on Maui. When I’m working, and especially in this context, I’m not always in the frame of mind for interpretive photography, and definitely not in the way I’ve been working with black and white film for quite a few years now. But I always have my phone with me, and still pause every so often, sometimes in wonder, other times in puzzlement. All of the following were shot on my iPhone and edited with Snapseed on the same device.

From one afternoon reconnoitering on the slope of Haleakala near Kula, looking towards Lahaina in the distance with Lana’i off the coast.
On the slope of Haleakala near Keokea, with Kaho’olawe centered in the distance and Molokini to the right.
Overlooking Polua Bay looking towards Moloka’i across the channel.
Training room, basics and plus, early days for this space.
Honokōwai mobile while I stood under while waiting for a coffee.
Nothing to see here, just some bathroom boba…

Mono gradients

My camera or film holders are almost always loaded with black and white film, but I’ve been throwing a couple of rolls of color into my bags on recent trips to see if I can capture some of the fascinating color pallets. This was taken from the ridge-line road far above the town of Lee Vining and over the western shores of Mono Lake with its volcanic cinder cones, springs, tufa, and migratory birds. Sunsets can be overwhelming or subtle here, sometimes both.

Intrepid 4×5 Mk2, Fujinon 180mm f/5.6, Ektar 100

O’ahu moments

While I was on O’ahu for some work recently, I had the chance to explore more of the island beyond the standard tourist view of Honolulu. A couple were taken in or near Honolulu, but quite a few were during a short day trip to the north shore and around the eastern shore before heading back to Honolulu. All of these were photographed with my iPhone, but thinking about the composition in a film frame of mind, specifically a film-paper-developer-toning method I’m currently fond of, and regretting not taking a single camera and a few rolls with me.

Kalihi flare, taken while finding a local H-Mart
Makapu’u lookout
Passing Ka’a’awa
La’ie looking out at Kukuiho’olua
Pineapple garden, koi pond
Waikiki lunchtime
Early arrival for a choral event

Walking through Spring, the color edition

The daily solace and contemplative wandering has continued, but the emphasis this time is on the color instead of just the textures and play of light. All of these photos were taken with a black and white frame of mind, but in the end the contrasting sometimes violent colors were the impulse for capturing the moment. This series of photos were shot and edited on my iPhone over the last month.

Walking into spring

Walks on local nature trails and fire roads have become a mostly daily solace and chance to escape the four walls. It’s been almost a year since we started this ritual, and observing the slow changes along familiar paths has been wonderful at times. Here I’ve accumulated a series of photos shot and edited on my iPhone over the last month or so during these walks.

Aztec Ruins National Monument

I usually have mixed feelings about reconstructions at archaeological sites, they can either be super kitschy, or overly sterile. The kiva reconstruction in the Pueblo Great House at Aztec Ruins National Monument is by far the best I’ve seen in our National Park Service. When I was there it was a bit too cold, but that’s just because all the windows were open and letting in a ton of natural light with a breeze.

The interior feels very alive, like, in just a few minutes a group of people could come in, light a fire, and start preparations for the days activities. Walking down the stairs to the floor of the kiva feels like being the first person into a civic building or church early in the morning. I came to the kiva knowing that it was a piece of monumental architecture, having read about Pueblo Great Houses, and I left with a much better understanding for the feeling of occupying the space, all that was missing was a nice fire with the sounds and smells of activities.

The rest of the walking tour through the 400 room Pueblo Great House that thrived here for a while was very good at contextualizing the room types, centrality of the kivas, and building styles present in this structure versus the others at this National Monument. The beginning of the walking tour starts with entering the kiva reconstruction and the end allowed me to walk into and through a series of rooms that still have their ceilings and portions of their windows and doors intact. After exiting the great house, I walked along the exterior wall, with a greater appreciation for the construction of the great houses and the feeling of being inside without the sky as a ceiling.

First print from Dia de Los Muertos 2019

My first print from this year’s Dia de Los Muertos and the novenarios (nine nights of processionals) at Olvera Street and the El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historic Monument.

This year I used my Ventura 66 medium format folding camera, essentially an ultra compact large format camera with a fixed lens and more limited movements, coupled with the film/developer formula of HP5 and D-76 that has worked for me in past years. Those tools combined with Adox MCC 110 silver gelatin paper, which is able to hold so much more subtle detail from the shadows to the mid-range tones including the highlights, have combined to make printing the rolls of film from this year a revelatory practice that has inspired me to go back and revisit previous years to see what I missed before adopting this new paper into my workflow.

This is a scan of a work print on Adox MCC 110 silver gelatin paper, shot on Ilford HP5 medium format film with a Ventura 66 camera.

Hot Springs and Dumps

 

scan-owensvalley

At the crossroads between the hot springs and the dump, Upper Owens Valley, CA. I’m enjoying the moment after shooting this in odd conditions and having the first test prints come out almost exactly how I envisioned it, and showing the potential for the final prints I want.

If you’ve never experienced the basin and range along the sheer granite wall that is the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada Mountains it can be hard to explain. The weather systems can change rapidly and the high altitude lets the sun assault you faster than you’d think. On days like the one I photographed this scene, I’d just been through whiteout conditions, high-winds, sideways snow, and although it was super sunny at the moment of this photo, it was quite cold but the sun was cooking my face.

I’d gone from 1 stop of light if I was lucky earlier that morning, to 8+ stops of light (but probably more as far as my film was concerned with its high UV sensitivity). I made sure to note the conditions so when I processed I ended up retracting the processing -2, in this case with temperature since the water out of the faucet was too cold for processing and needed to be heated anyways.

This is a scan of an 8×10 work print on Ilford MGFB (silver gelatin) paper, shot on Foma Ultra 100 (Arista EDU) black and white 35mm film, with a Canon F-1 camera and a 35mm f/2.0.

Space X / SAOCOM1A on film

SpaceX-20181007

Last Sunday I decided to try my hand at an eight minute exposure of the Space X launch at Vandenburg Air Force Base and then figure out how to develop it later. I wasn’t sure how long of an exposure it was going to be when we left home because there hasn’t been a launch and return of the first stage to Vandenburg yet, this would be the first time and I wanted to capture the launch and returning first stage module.

We set up our cameras on Santa Ynez Peak amidst all of the telecommunications towers and antennae, you can see the rims of two of the dishes on the bottom left edge of the photo. Even though my lens didn’t have the ultra wide angle of view needed to catch the entire movement of the first stage module, it was still able to capture the majority of the ascent and the two reentry deceleration burns, as well as the atmospheric haze and glow at the top of the frame that looked like a lit up nebula, but also some of the streaky cloud-like flare from the ascent.

This is a scan of a test print on Fomabrom 111 VCFB paper from an HP5+ 4×5 sheet film negative, developed in a divided Stoekler two part development solution, that I shot on an Intrepid 4×5 MkII with a Geronar 90mm f/8 lens (this has approximately a 65 degree angle of view, equivalent to a 28mm lens on a full frame 35mm film system).

Sunset and Bubbles in Hyde Park

Our last day in Australia was spent wandering the quays in Sydney around The Rocks, the Botanic Gardens and then Hyde Park towards sunset. While standing in front of the Archibald Fountain near the parks northern entrance, the sun was setting down Market Street towards the St. James tube station and the sunlight was bouncing off the buildings creating an indirect diffuse glow. It was a beautiful scene, with families having a Saturday afternoon in the park, including making bubbles, all while the Mardi Gras parade goers were suiting up and organizing themselves all around the fountain plaza between the gothic St. Mary’s Cathedral and the ultra-modern Market Street with the Sydney Tower Eye.

This is a scan of an 8×10 print on Ilford MGFB (silver gelatin) paper with selenium toning, shot on HP5+ black and white film, with a Canon F-1 camera and a 35mm f/2.8 lens.