The Good Stuff.

4.11.2016

Twenty years in in which to grow more beautiful. A side by side comparison of two black and white images taken twenty years apart.

2012.

1992.

The earlier one taken on a Hasselblad with a 150mm lens. 

The later one taken with a Nikon using a Hasselblad 150mm lens with an adapter. 

The early one scanned from a print the later one a digital file.

9 comments:

  1. I feel like there is a small textbook on how to light to suit the model tucked into these two pictures.

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  2. Holy mackerel, that woman has excellent genes or she needs to share her skin care techniques.

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  3. Digital or film you are the "Maestro" in portraits, Kirk!
    robert

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  4. You do REALLY nice work. And,you have a great eye for models.

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  5. "Holy mackerel, that woman has excellent genes or she needs to share her skin care techniques."

    Hahah! I suspect that she doesn't smoke, she eats properly and both exercises and rests well! A combination of factors rarely seen unfortunately.

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  6. Using medium format lenses on small sensors, whether FF or even m4/3, seems so wrong, but surprisingly, the teles work very well indeed. Just yesterday shot some "tests" with a 200mm for Pentax67 on a Canon Rebel and results were nearly equal to a Canon 200mm L lens. The wides are too bulky, but the teles aren't. So, your use of the 150 here was interesting, and showed the potential.

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  7. If I remember correctly, that more recent photo of Lou Lofton was taken with a Nikon 3XXX camera -- one you descibed as so cheap it could be considered a toss-it-in-the-car-always-available-backup. As always, the result in this case speaks to the skill of the photographer and that hauntingly beautiful face. But it does prompt the heretical question -- who needs anything more sophisticated and more expensive to produce spectacular stll photography?

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  8. Call me weird, but I prefer the older film image.
    The highlights in the skin - particularly the forehead - are much more pleasant to me in the first image.
    But of course I don't know what lighting was used, so that is very likely the reason.

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