Tag Archives: Photography

Ensign Ful-Vue

18 Jun

Ensign Ful-Vue (grey)

So, here’s the new addition to the ol’ camera collection, an Ensign Ful-Vue II (c.1953). In 1953 Ensign introduced coloured versions of the camera to celebrate the Queen’s Coronation. “Called Ful-Vue ‘a la mode’ they came in red, white and blue, very patriotic, and were advertised as fashion accessories. A clear plastic case came with the camera presumably to allow others to admire your matching handbag and camera.” [ensign-demon.co.uk]

White? Not really. Grey? Pretty much. Green? Some times, yes. A Flickr member commented on its look of an underwater camera, that he almost expects to see a ship’s compass through the top lens. I think there is something about it that does rather resemble a submarine or one of those old diving helmets. It’s a very interesting design, and has a wonderfully large viewfinder which I intend to get some TtV shots with. The whole thing needs a teeny bit of TLC, but as far as I can tell it’s still in working order so I should be able to get some test film out of it at some point.

Halina-Prefect

10 Jun

As some of you may already know, I purchased a Halina-Prefect in January this year, and after finishing a test roll of 120 film it sat, undeveloped, on my bookcase ever since. Well, I finally sent the film off to a very kind retired-photographer who was willing to develop it for me and the photographs you see here are just a few from the contact sheets. When I bought the camera (only for a few pennies) I didn’t know if it was still in working order, so I was very pleased this morning to open the envelope and find actual photographs inside.

Narrowboats on Leeds canal

Narrowboat on Leeds canal

Sign

Gnomes

You can read more about the Halina-Prefect here

4 Jun

Aladdin Sane, by Brian Duffy (15 June 1933 - 31 May 2010)

The Big Picture

28 May

Following the spectacular images posted of the eruption of Eyjafjallajokull, Boston.com continues to take my breath away (and distract me from doing anything remotely productive) with a new collection of disturbing, yet highly poignant photographs documenting the effects of the BP Oil Spill:

A Greenpeace activist steps through oil on a beach along the Gulf of Mexico on May 20, 2010 near Venice, Louisiana. (John Moore/Getty Images)

A dragonfly tries to clean itself as it is stuck to marsh grass covered in oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, in Garden Island Bay on the Gulf Coast of Louisiana near Venice on Tuesday, May 18, 2010. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Crews try to clean an island covered in oil on the south part of East Bay May 23, 2010. (REUTERS/Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace)

A shrimp boat is used to collect oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico in the waters of Chandeleur Sound, Louisiana on May 5, 2010. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

See the rest here (39 images in total)

2 May

Groucho Marx, by Richard Avedon

Moon

30 Nov

I’ve been meaning  to have a go at some moon photography. There are some fantastic examples out there.
It must be said that I’ve refused to buy myself a telescope for years, because I’m the kind of person who would get obsessed with staring in to space and would eventually find myself locked in a padded cell somewhere. The universe fascinates me. Too much. And that giant rock in the sky is no exception. I am, after all, a Cancerian. So I decided that if I wasn’t going to buy a telescope, it wouldn’t do any harm to take some photographs and, besides, I was interested to find out what a 300mm lens could produce. The result isn’t too bad for a hand held shot. You can clearly see the Aristarchus, Copernicus, and Tycho Craters, which seems like a pretty good result. In fact, I was surprised how much detail you can get when you give it a go.

Moon

Hero #1

24 Nov

I’ve been thinking about writing a series of entries introducing you to a group of people I consider to be pretty damn fabulous. I’m not sure how long it will be before I get bored, maybe after the first one, maybe after a hundred, but let’s give it a go shall we.

I bet you’re all thinking I’m going to start with my snuggle bunny, Mr Ignaz Semmelweis? Well, you’re wrong. I’ll get to him, eventually, but it’s only right someone else gets the privilege. Ignaz gets far too much attention from me. No, first up is a fella rarely mentioned these days, but a hundred years ago George “Flashlight” Lawrence was the hippest guy in town due to his pioneering work in the world of flashlight, aerial, and panoramic photography. He’s probably best known for his rather spectacular 160-degree panorama shot of San Francisco taken after the 1906 earthquake, entitled San Francisco in Ruins:

thumbnail image (click to see the 7000 x 2748 monster)

My super ultra wide angled lens wept when it saw that one. But his placement in my list of The Fabulous Ones is almost entirely down to his development, in 1900, of this beast:

Lawrence

At the time it was the world’s largest camera, and cost the price of a house to build.

But how did it come about? His success in panoramic photography led officials at the Chicago and Alton railroad to request his services in producing a single-plate image of their new passenger train, ‘Alton Limited.’ They’d got it all figured out in their heads, Lawrence would provide “the largest photograph in the world of the handsomest train in the world.” Lovely!

The photographer suggested he could, with his existing cameras, make a series of sectional views and piece them all together, but the rather enthusiastic officials made it quite clear they were having none of that. They had a faultless train, and with it they demanded a faultless photograph, insisting that “in length, the picture must not measure less than eight feet.” This was, after all, the beginning of the 20th century. Why not demand a single-plate photograph no smaller than eight feet in length?

Not one to be defeated by the rather insignificant point that the equipment capable of producing such a thing didn’t exist, Lawrence spent the next eight months designing and building the Überkamera with local inventor J. A. Anderson. What they built was a 640kg chunk of technology way ahead of it’s time, requiring 15 men to operate the thing, with a 10′x6′ plate holder which would shoot an 8′x4 1/2′ photograph – three times larger than the average print size of existing panoramic cameras. When the morning of the shoot finally arrived, they hauled the equipment in to a horse-drawn van and transported it over 6 miles to a suitable location in the middle of a field.

Say cheese.

Alton Limited

thumbnail image (click to see this wide angled beauty)

Three prints of this handsome train were submitted to the Paris Exposition of 1900, one in the railway category, another in photography, and the third submitted in to the United States Government Building. So flabbergasted by this piece of photographic genius, the image was immediately branded a “fake” and the French Consul General of New York was sent along to Chicago to have a good look at the Überkamera to make sure Flashlight Lawrence wasn’t cheating. When they were all convinced of its authenticity, they gladly awarded the photographer their ‘Grand Prize of the World for Photographic Excellence.’

That, my lovelies, is why George Raymond Lawrence is number one in my list of most fabulous people ever to have issued forth in to the world. I hope you agree.