Monday, March 31, 2008

Ode to Snow at Hidden Meadow

I'm not a poet with pen in hand, well maybe with a camera in hand. I love snow, not the dirty stuff that gets thrown up by the passing snow plows as they rumble along our highways and byways or the snow that gets shoveled and piled up at the end of our drive ways and walkways , no I love the snow that falls in a presitine wilderness setting, especially on a bright sunny day when the rays of the sun catch and illuminate the millions upon milions of what look like to me diamonds set against a dazzling blue sky. One of my favourite places to take my camera is Silver Star Provincial Park, located near Vernon, B.C. the area has cross country ski trails, snow shoe trails and further up the hill, down hill skiing, some of the best in the country.

The image posted was taken near Hidden Meadow on a snow trail at Silver Star with my Tachihara 4 x 5 view camera and a 120mm lens.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

The Beauty of Photography

I recently came back from visiting the Vancouver Art Gallery where the show TruthBeauty: PIctorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845 - 1945 is currently being exhibited till April 27th of this year. As I wandered around the main floor of the gallery I was in awe, there before me were prints by Ansel Adams, Edward Weston, Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Steichen, and many others, the range from print mediums are impressive with just a few to list here, bromoil, platinum, carbon, silver gelatin, you name it. I have long been interested in the history of photography and indeed one of the reasons that I love using the view camera so much is because the of historical significance of the camera and the fact that I able to combine it with modern day computer and ink jet print technologies. The show made me think of my own direction in photography and how I had left behind my silver gelatin printing and I am no doubt that I am on the right road with my computerization of images and ink jet output of those images.


The image posted is of Lake Cowichan on Vancouver Island, May of 1990, 300mm lens, 4 x 5 view camera.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Wind Blown Grass by The Seashore

I made this image on a windy day at the beach in Niakoon Provincial Park Located on Graham Island, one of the Queen Charlotte Islands in September of 1993. It was a little challenging at times as the wind was quite strong and I was trying to not turn my view camera into a sail while mounted on the tripod !

Monday, March 10, 2008

Frozen Beach

Spring will be officially upon us soon, and soon the cold days of winter will be behind us. I find winter a time of great beauty no matter where I am. This is one of my archive images from December of 1993, frost covered logs at Port Renfrew on Vancouver Island.The image was made with my 8 x 10 view camera and a 300 mm lens, Recently I have scanned this image to make a 40 x 50 inch print ( using a Microtek M1 scanner ). Zooming in on the photo while in Photoshop on my computer brings up a incredible amount of detail.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Broken Tree, Hecate Straight

Here is a view from Niakoon Provincial Park on Graham Island, one of the Queen Charolette Islands. This view is looking east out to Hecate Straight, one of the many images that I am scanning and archiving, made in September of 1993, Tachihara 4 x 5 view camera and a 120mm lens.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Microtek ArtixScan M1: An Informal Review



Update February 12, 2013:

Microtek has new scanners, the M2 and F2 , links and info on my blog "Here"

Update November 14, 2011:

I have had this scanner for over 3 years now and have done about 2000 scans with it, mostly all 4 x 5 black and white negatives, I recently sent it in for repairs as I was having focus issues, the scanner was not producing correctly focused images, I live in Canada, so I shipped it off to California in the US for repairs, please note if you ever buy one of these keep the box, you never know when you might need it for shipping. Mictotek in the US was good to deal in terms of repairs at least for me, they had my scanner in and out in a couple of weeks, the scanner worked fine when I got it back, but do check your focus as it can mis-focus from time to time.

Here is my original review:

I'm not in the habit of posting equipment reviews on my blog, especially for that of a film scanner, most of whom I'm sure shoot digital. But in the world of hybrid large format camera film photography and digital printing, I thought some people may find my thoughts interesting, I should also mention I'm not a technical junkie and there are a number of reviews on the internet that have far more in depth technical specs and data that I could ever provide.

I recently acquired the new Microtek ArtixScan M1 after having owned the Microtek Scanmaker i900 for the past 3 years or so. I felt it was a decent scanner that did a lot of scans for me, last year alone I did about 400 scans with the i900 and never failed to work for me. The i900 was the first really decent scanner I had owned, I bought at the time because of the features that it had, I could scan 4 x 5 to 8 x 10 film and the machine was then priced around $800 , which I could afford, I thought this was good. I was making my first foray into the brand new for me world of ink jet printing, before that I had a traditional darkroom set up in the spare bedroom of my home, with the new scanner, computer and 17 inch wide printer I squeezed this all into my then existing darkroom, I dismantled my home made 8 x 10 horizontal enlarger which was six feet long ( keep in mind my darkroom was only 10 x 10 feet ) I used photoshop to "develop" my images into ones and zeros and I liked what it was doing for me from an artistic view point, I felt there were tonalities and contrast ranges that would have been very difficult to achieve if I were making a projection made print with a conventional enlarger and tray development in the darkroom ( I know there are others who are far better at darkroom printing than myself ! ) I eventually dismantled my darkroom completely and set up a small film developing station in the laundry room of my house, I transformed the old darkroom into my new computer generated print room using my Epson 4800 printer, I put my wood working skills to use and made a nice wood desk and printer stand and gave the old darkroom a fresh coat of paint.

A big part of the cross over to digitizing my work involved the scanner, I needed something good, but I'm not a millionaire and can't afford some of the high end drums scanners or flat bed scanners that can easily cost $10,000 or more, I believe its best to afford the best you can buy with the given funds at your disposal and to go out and make pictures with that given equipment and no worry about what you don't have.

With the introduction late last year of the long awaited Microtek ArtixScan M1 which is priced around $800 US for the pro version, I wondered do I really need a new scanner ?, after using it for the past several weeks I have concluded the M1 is a lot better than my old i900, the scans are cleaner in the sense that they don't look as "grainy" ( in some photos ) it has better dynamic range from shadows to highlights and although its hard to see at the size I am printing there is better sharpness, I could see this in comparisons scans I did from a 35 mm slide on the i900 , the M1 and also a friend's Nikon Coolscan ED V. The Mictotek M1 35 mm scans are far better by a long shot than the i900, but not quite as sharp as the dedicated 35 mm Nikon scanner, no surprise there, although with a powerful sharpening tool like FlocalBlade I was able to sharpen up the 35 mm scans quite a bit and which I feel would make a very respectable or slightly bigger 8 x 10 print. I also scanned in one of my earlier 4 x 5 black and white images from the old Kettle Valley Railway line near Kelowna , B.C., I made this picture of a trestle in the summer of 1987, at a time before I fully understood the Ansel Adam's Zone System, the sky is quite a bit over exposed on this T-Max negative, the M1 did a nice job of retaining detail in the sky with out it looking too grainy after I finished enhancing the image ( see posted image ). I mostly scan using the SilverFast scanning software and use the optional HDR 16 bit grayscale mode, this give me a negative when opened in Adobe Photoshop, but before I open them in CS3 I scan a batch of negatives and use Automator on my Mac computer to invert them into positives and assign a color profile to the image, then I work on each image as time permits.


I will be using this scanner to archive my older black and white images that I have shot over the past twenty years from various formats which include 120 medium format film to 8 x 10 almost all black and white, and most of my negatives are I feel quite good technically, no blasted high lights or missing detail from shadow areas, I feel this scanner should be quite capable of handling the task of making some darn fine fine prints up to 40 x 50 inches depending on the negative size.

So there it is, maybe not much of a long in depth review per se but more of a run down of my digital imaging work flow using the M1, if there are any questions you can e-mail me or post a response on this blog.

I am posting one of my very few color images from my collection that I made with my 8 x 10 view camera, this image was shot on Galiano Island around 1994 with a 300 mm Schneider lens. I have never pursued color very much with the view camera ( maybe an idea for another blog entry ) , for one even back then, 14 or 15 years ago it was very costly , the film was costing me $10 per sheet ( Fuji ) plus $7 a sheet to have it processed that works out to $17.00 each time I clicked the shutter, now what do they say about wood working...... measure twice and cut once ? well its kinda the same with the a 8 x 10 view camera and color slide film, meter twice and click once !

Saturday, March 01, 2008

The Remains Of An Underwater Forest

This is Kelp, a kind of large brown seaweed that can grow to a very long length and forms a kind of underwater "forest" which makes a nice home for sea creatures.This image of kelp which I made with my 4 x 5 view camera and a 120mm lens was washed up on the shore of Albert Head Lagoon, Vancouver Island.