Shot on Film: Louise Harrison


Back in 2004 we were doing a photo shoot with the Liverpool Legends.  Probably the finest Beatles cover band ever.  Our assignment was to emulate a few of the Beatles famous album covers, which we did to such an effect that Sir Paul McCartney sent a somewhat scathing letter to the band.  Personally as the photographer, I was flattered.   They were too.

The shoot took place at Bruce Starrenburgs Light Box studio in East Dundee.  Bruce would do the film processing while we were shooting.  Not quite as fast as digital, but pretty awesome having film processed while you shoot.

When the band arrived, they brought along their biggest fan. Louise Harrison, George Harrison’s older sister.  The band was awesome to work with.  We enjoyed a day of hard work; laughs and great hospitality from Bruce as Louise kept us entertained with stories of the Beatles early days.

The shot below was made using a minolta XE-7 and a Kamero 100mm 2.8 prime lens on Astia 100F color reversal film.  Studio Lighting was three Photogenic Machine Studio master IIs along with an Impact Luxbank 48” softbox as the main light, a Westcott 24” kick light and a 4” tube hair light. 

This image was scanned using a Minolta Dimage 5400 full frame.  No re-touching.


Shooting the GT on Film: Part One

Every now and then we will get a call for an unusual assignment.  Back in 2004, the Ford Motor Company released the much-anticipated Ford GT.  Homage to the legendary Ford GT-40 that won the 24 hours of LeMans in 1966, 67, 68 and 69 reaching a then unheard of top speed of 218mph and embarrassing Ferrari forever. 

The new GT was a hit.  Production was sold out. Cars were on back-order; dealers were limited to maybe one car, if they even qualified to receive any at all.  When a local dealer learned they were to receive a GT, they requested that we come in and photograph the car for the purposes of creating some canvas wall art for the dealer offices and showroom.

As with most assignments, there is always a hitch.  The car was located in the dealership showroom.  We were not allowed to move the car to a proper studio with a seamless sweep.  Additionally the client didn’t want the photos to show any of the showroom area walls, which were mostly glass along with a rigid iron ceiling and hard fluorescent lighting.  We could move the car, by engaging neutral and gently pushing it around the crowded showroom. Gently being the operative word here. The engine was not to be started under any circumstances.   

With digital cameras in their infancy and limited to a few measly megapixels, we were not confident of obtaining a wall-art worthy file from which to print.  We decided to shoot with a Hasselblad 501 medium format camera and Carl Zeiss lenses as well as a Minolta XE-7 35mm camera and Rokkor prime lenses with both cameras using Fuji Astia 100 color reversal film.  Lighting consisted of four Photogenic Machine Studio Master II’s, powering two bank lights and three soft boxes.  The only indication of proper exposure was using our trusty Sekonic light meter.  No shooting then instantly checking the camera-back to look at exposure.  We have become a little spoiled with digital instant feedback.

Film grain wasn’t much of a concern, since we were using Fuji Astia and the images would be printed on canvas.  Looking closely on screen, the grain is evident as is the intentional over exposure of the film.

Our challenge furthered, when the client wanted the car on both black and white backgrounds.  We had a weekend in which the dealer agreed to close and allow for us to set up, shoot and have the showroom back together for business on Monday.

We of course had a blast and were able to create eleven 20x30 wall art canvas prints from the shoot. Some day soon, I will post a continuation with some behind the scenes photos of our weekend mobile studio set up.




Film Cameras: Minolta X-570

Continuing here in my second post on film cameras. All of you camera addicts out there remember the cameras I write about I have actually used and have extensive knowledge of and experience with. Therefore they are my favorites for good reason. But stayed tuned, as I will also share with you some popular cameras that I have owned and used which proved to be a major disappointment.

I bought this Minolta X-570 back in the summer of 1985. One of the reasons for choosing the X570 over the X700 (the later of which I ended up purchasing four of) was that one could see the selected shutter speed, the suggested metering speed along with the aperture without removing your eye from the viewfinder. Amazing. The then top of the line X700, had all of this except the selected shutter speed, which means you have to remove your eye from the viewfinder and look at the shutter dial.

The X370, X570, X700 (X300, X500 in other countries) are often dismissed in the professional world as ‘cheap plastic cameras’. Not true. While the top of the prism is plastic, it’s by design. Something Minolta had been doing for decades. The resin used is a ‘high impact’ polycarbonate that is nearly impossible to destroy, I say nearly because mine is actually cracked and broken after the camera fell thirty feet onto hard concrete. Factor that the next time you look at a Nikon or Canon with a dented prism. The rest of the upper body is all-metal, with paint over brass for heavy handling and finger acids.

You will notice that Minolta cameras and lenses almost always retain their original paintwork whereas other top brands i.e. Nikon, Canon, Leica, brass easily. The paint protects the body, and Minolta paintwork is top-drawer. The finest and most robust you will ever see on a camera.

This particular X570 has seen years of personal use, decades of hard professional use. It has been dropped, thrown down (long story), knocked down (from a two story balcony during a photo shoot), hit hard enough to dislodge the lens (drunk groomsman).

It has experienced hard rain, extreme heat and severe cold. It has shot hundreds of weddings, models, musicians and portraits all without complaint. The internal meter is the most accurate of any camera I have ever owned and the super bright viewfinder is a pleasure to use.

These days it sits quietly in an aluminum flight case, battered, tattered, covered in gaffers tape waiting for its next assignment. With the exception of a routine CLA the camera has never been in for repair. The rubberized cloth focal plane shutter curtains are as tight and taut as when new.

I have an extensive collection of lenses but mostly use this with it’s original super sharp MD 50mm f1.7 prime lens (noticed the dented filter ring) along with an incredible Vivitar 100mm f2.8 prime for portraits and models. The camera is almost always mounted on a Minolta MD-1 professional motor drive, which is another indestructible piece of gear.

If you are serious about 35mm film, this is an excellent choice.



 
 

Creative Spotlight: Holloway Studios

Earlier this year we received a call from Letitia Holloway, artist and interior designer.  Letitia needed a few images of her interior design work.  I met Letitia and her colleague/artist Anthony Dunn at the first location to photograph.  Walking in, I was struck at  how the home had a museum-gallery like appeal.  Everything was minimalist.  Spaces were large and open, never crowded.  Fine furnishings complimented the gallery like atmosphere with well appointed art as its centerpiece.

Walking the project, Letitia and Anthony explained that all the art pieces were either commissioned or restored by their studio.  In fact, creating art is the main focus of Holloway Studios.

Letitia and Anthony collaborate with interior designers who are looking for that special wall art as the final touch to their design.  After seeing the interior space and talking with the client, the team at Holloway will design and create a custom one-off art piece that perfectly compliments the space.  This process not only saves time, it really elevates at lot of stress and frustration for the interior designer.

That being said, interior design work is secondary to Letitia who prefers to create custom art for other interior designers, architects, high-end builders and the discriminate home-owner looking for that perfect canvas.

Below are a few of my favorites from two of Letitia's projects.  In each space, Holloway Studios was responsible for the art, interior design and custom furniture.  


Film Cameras: Minolta XE-7


Back in 2016 we did a blog post entitled ‘Shot with film’.  Looking at our blog stats, I was surprised to find that this is the most visited post by far.  I mentioned back then that I would dig up some of my well used film cameras and share them with you.  Here is the first one.

This is my all time favorite SLR camera. Now before you photographers get all bent out of shape, this is my favorite, not yours.

Having owned and used what I consider many of the great ones (Nikon F2, F3, F4, Canon F1, EF, Minolta XM, X-700, X-570, Leica R3, R4, R6, Leica M4, M6, Cl), the Minolta XE-7 easily stands out.

The Minolta XE-7 (the XE in Japan, and XE-1 in Europe) was built in collaboration with Leitz, using an electronic Copal focal plane shutter.  The release of which, is so smooth and effortless that mirror lock-up was deemed unnecessary by the engineers that designed the camera.  This shutter was also used in the somewhat smaller Minolta XD-7.  The Lecia R3, is based on the Minolta XE-7, with the R4-R6 camera series based on the Minolta XD-7 camera.

I bought this one tattered, dirty and well used.  After sending it out for a CLA, it has become my favorite.  I have since purchased a few NOS Minolta XE-7s, which I use from time to time, but this one has had countless rolls of film run through it, doing duties at weddings, shooting models and rock bands, product photography, studio work and architectural.  In our blog post 'Think of Something Pleasant', all of the film shots are with this camera.  At this time it is loaded with a roll of Tri-X 100 and I take it with me just to do grab shots of locations that I’ve been and interesting sites I see.   

If anyone ever asks me to recommend a film camera, this is the first one that comes to mind.  It is extremely well made and finished and has never failed to fire or let me down.  Not ever.  In fact that is something I can say with every Minolta camera I own.  They don’t seem to break, even under extremely hard use.

There will probably be a dozen or so film cameras considered and I will try hard not to take three years to get to the next one.  Stay tuned.







Shot on Film: Incognito

One cold winter day in December 2001 when studio work was all finished, I grabbed my favorite Minolta XE-7, loaded up my Bronco with Samson (our studio dog) and drove off to a remote park for a walk. 

Here among the bare wet trees was a turn-of-the-century streetlight.  I would have completely missed it, if it weren’t for Samson walking over to take a look.

We were well off the beaten path and it was obvious that this lamp hadn’t been used in decades.  Further investigation revealed no purpose for it being there.

Upon returning to the main area of the park, I located an old map from the information center.  The lamp is apparently a lone survivor in what used to be a series lighting a paved path for moonlit walks through the park to a lodge and cabins that were torn down in the late twenties.  Long out of use with no other recognizable markers of its existence. 

I liked the fact that this old artifact of a time long forgotten stands alone in silence and well disguised among the trees, incognito.

Shot on Tri-X 100 using a Minolta XE-7 and a Rokkor 1.8 35mm lens.  Film was scanned full frame using a Minolta DiMage 5400 Elite film scanner without retouch or adjustment.

Random 002 : Michael Miller

This condo is one of my favorites.  Photographed in 2013, interior design by Michael Miller, every aspect of it is so artistic.  Tasteful well-placed art, fine custom furniture and a beautiful cityscape to look over while enjoying your favorite cocktail. 

For those curious, this was shot on a Sony A100 (honestly) using a Carl Zeiss designed 11mm lens.