Friday, July 11, 2025

Fun at Trevi Fountain.

 

I didn't realize that I spent an entire morning in the area around Trevi Fountain back in 1995. Groups of tourists came and went. People tossed coins in the fountain for luck. Vendors sold small statues of David. 

I liked the look of these guys so I aimed the Mamiya 6 with the 75mm lens at them and shot a frame. They  subsequently made it quite clear that one frame was more than enough. I nodded, smiled and moved on. 

Sometimes you get your one shot and that's it. No sense pushing it...

Thursday, July 10, 2025

A continuing discussion about sticking around a scene to work the changes. And practice becoming so boring that one becomes invisible. Even with a huge, medium format film camera. And a normal lens.


Two Italian Gentlemen discussing something in a public square in Rome.

I'm always astounded and bit incredulous when I see a video of Bruce Gilden rushing in to attack people with his camera and flash and then turn away after one frame with some smug sense of certainty that he had, in fact, captured a "decisive moment." The one frame. Captured while in motion. With the wide angle lens all stopped down to f11-16, compensated for with a blast of naked flash. I guess I could be like another blogger and just say, "to each their own." or some equivocal pablum, but I think the results of Gilden's work are two fold: To the viewer? Boring. To the subject? Threatening and disrespectful. 

Why insist on making a photograph such a desperate undertaking? Why make so many other people uncomfortable? Why not just make one's self invisible and keep taking photographs until you have something you like? Or something interesting? And why not use a lens you like instead of one that compensates for your lack of empathy or idea of collaboration? All questions, I guess, for another day. 

When I was scanning older, medium format, Hasselblad and Mamiya 6 negatives earlier in the week I came across this series that basically took up eight frames on my parsimonious twelve frame roll of film. I looked for a "hands down" winner but it turns out that I like each from for one reason or another. 

As you can tell from the perspective none of these frames were captured "voyeur style" with a long lens from behind a furtive fern or tree trunk. Nor were they anxiously "shot from the hip" which would imply giving up all control to chance. Nope. It's a standard lens. A 75 or 80mm lens on a big square format. Just like a 50mm on a 35mm sized frame. I'm probably standing about eight to ten feet from the two men I was interested in focusing. I was interesting in photographing them because they used their hands and big gestures as they spoke. Culturally different than people in my home town...

If I had any indication that I was making them uncomfortable I would have stopped and moved on because the thing I found visually interesting would have been lost. I think we are fearful sometimes that people will be confrontational if we photograph them without explicitly asking their permission. In a case like this I try to maintain a boring affect, take my time and calmly photograph with the idea that I'm taking in the whole scene and not just the people in the foreground. 

As you can see by the fall off in focus I am not depending on a small aperture to provide a big range of zone focusing. I am actually bringing the camera to my eye to compose and to make sure my focus is good. But I'm not doing it in any way that would indicate that I'm anxious to work quickly or that I fear discovery. Instead I'm photographing at a slow and measured pace and trying to represent that I'm just doing something very routine and normal. 

Had I stopped at the first frame I would have lost potentially six or seven following frames that are either different enough to be contenders or, in fact, better than the original action that drew me to photograph. I think this is a valid approach. To become part of the scene and not something that sticks out. But I could be totally misguided. ?







Seen and ......

Ignored.

The frame I was looking for all along. Patience can work in your favor. 

Best not to rush.

 

Is it a landscape or an uncropped "street photo"?


 Good grief. I love the square format. 

Somewhere in Italy in 1995...


A card game hustle in the market in Rome. Trying to blend in with a big, manual focusing, medium format camera. Sometimes you just have to go for it.

 





Bench Dynamics. Stick around for a while. Don't just take a single shot and move on. No one really cares and, if they do, they'll let you know.

 


Rome. Piazza Navona. 

Stitches out! Bandages off! Cleared to get back in the pool and swim hard on Tuesday!! Celebrating with..... a perfect cup of coffee from Trianon Coffee. Oh what the heck? Go Ahead and Toss a Walnut Scone in there as well.

 

coffee at Termini Station in Rome.

so, it's been ten days since the surgery. I followed my doctor's recommendations to the letter. Gobbled down my course of antibiotics. Avoided stress, strain and exercise. Today I got my stitches removed and the surgeon surveyed her work. All good. I am now approved to start exercising again. I'll be back in the pool on Tuesday morning. I can hardly wait. I'm inflating my floaties right now....

I have also been avoiding going out for photo walks. Three reasons: the surgeon was concerned that straining (walking fast, etc.) might raise blood pressure which puts a burden on the stitches and impedes wound closure. Nobody wanted sweat to drip into the incision area and, well, any walk in Texas with enough light to photograph in means it's already hot. And third, I didn't relish looking like a weirdo with a huge (1.5 inch by 3 inch) white bandage taped to my face. No sense looking like a wounded gazelle in a world full of predators, right?

Now the remaining scar just makes me look meaner... At least in my mind. 

Now B. will expect me to re-engage in doing household chores....

Now considering recovery cameras. Let's see....


Wednesday, July 09, 2025

Photographing out in the world. Is it "one perfect shot" and then move on? Or is it "catch the developing action" and select the right frame after the fact?


Sitting at a restaurant just across the small square from the Pantheon in Rome. B. and I had been walking through the eternal city for days. I was carrying a Hasselblad 500CM; a film camera, along with its heavy 100mm f3.5 Planar lens. I wanted a cool drink so we stopped near the Pantheon. In fact, right across the plaza from it. Our plan was to drink something cool and refreshing and then stroll into the uncrowded, centuries old building to look around. 

The couple in these four photographs were sitting right in front of us and having an animated conversation. I focused, wet my index finger and held it up in the air to estimate the right exposure and then shot a frame, waited for the animation and expressions to change, shot another frame, etc. etc.

If the couple knew I was making photographs they certainly didn't acknowledge it. I'll assume that they assumed I was naturally interested in the Pantheon; if they noticed at all. There are more exposures than the ones that I'm showing but the one just above has been in our entry foyer from the day we moved into our house 28 years ago. It's one of my favorite images. Especially as a hand-printed, 20x20 inch print on double weight paper, matted and framed.

I came across this series again as I was practicing scanning old film negatives. I have a binder with about 160 rolls of 120mm film negatives, coupled with contact sheets. I've been going through them for a while each day to see what I thought looked like a good candidate to print at the time and then how my taste may have changed some thirty years later. 

With digital I would go ahead and process everything I shot that might even vaguely be a potentially fun photograph. But back in the film era one had to be much more conservative. A sniper of editing as opposed to a machine gun approach to selecting frames. Each frame, printed represented hours of time and lots of effort in the darkroom. Not to mention the cost of multiple sheets of big printing paper --- which even then was not cheap. That meant finding the "best" image from a series and focusing one's energy on that project. Looking for complete "bangers" instead of working up multiple, possible candidates. 

Digital imaging changes the thought process; at least for me. I'll go out on an afternoon and shoot 200 frames. If I find something I really like I'll try various compositions and distances from camera to the subject. If it's an interesting person I'll work with them by shooting multiple frames as I try to get a range of expressions and gestures. I've often found, after the fact, that I've just shot a couple dozen images of someone I just met in order to get the two or three frames I like. I would have never done that while doing travel photography for myself. If there had been a client project involved but for a casual trip with my spouse? Probably never than five or six medium format film frames. 

I have no idea what the couple was discussing. My take, when I see the age difference and the fact that in the last frame the young woman on the right is wearing braces on her teeth, is that this is a father and a daughter who've met to talk about school or family. Or they themselves are visitors. There's no rule that Italian native speakers can't be tourists as well...

Looking through the big binder makes me remember how much fun it was to shoot with a camera that introduced so much friction into the process of making images. Getting keepers seemed like so much bigger victories. My favorites from this series are the top image because it looks more serious and the arm adds so much sense of connection, and the last image because it encapsulates joy. Yours?