Monthly Archives: August 2013
I made a promise to myself about two years ago. Looking forward to retirement, I said I really want to go back to the old school way of doing things! I’m not rejecting all the great progress we’ve made with modern cameras and lenses, but I still have a great love for the humble beginnings of my love affair with the craft of photography! I loved the old manual lenses, how it felt to focus them, turning the aperture ring, and the heft of the bodies.
When I went to work for Nikon 11 years ago this month, I had a vast collection of classic AI-S Nikkor manual focus lenses that I had collected over my 30+ year career. I was advised to sell everything while they still had value as digital and auto-foucs were clearly the way of the future. So I sold two F5’s, an F100, and Nikon FM-T Titanium and about 20 lenses ranging from 16mm to 400mm. I eventually got used to the new cameras, and lenses, but from time to time, I really missed my old little Nikkor jewels!
Since I was the Nikon rep for the South I was always finding great deals on some of the very lenses I had let go, so I started collecting them again, and now I have all the lenses I sold back then, and a few more!!! Now you may be wondering if this means the old lenses are better than the new glass, no, but they do have a very special charm all there own! I’ve always believed that every manufacturer makes some lenses that are extra special, what I call the “legendary glass”! Every camera maker has a few lenses that are acknowledged as being among the best ever made in that focal length. That was the Nikon lenses I sold, and now own again. While they may not be the best, most highly sought after modern lenses, the “legendary” ones can certainly hold their own!
I now use a modern camera body, the Nikon D800, with some of these classic lenses, and it is not only great fun, but the combination yields drop dead gorgeous results! I really love the classic legendary glass when shooting nature and airplane images, see the two examples below!
I recently have purchased a complete Fuji X system for when weight is an issue in the field. I love these smaller mirror less cameras and their wonderful glass as well! They have old school controls and are built really well. The first three images in this blog post were with the Fuji X-E1 and Fujinon lenses. With these two systems, I’m having a blast, and more fun than ever being a photographer!
One thing is for sure, we certainly have some of the best gear to enjoy making photographs with, in the history of the craft!!!
Blessings,
the pilgrim
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This entry was posted on Tuesday, August 6th, 2013 at 12:18 am
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The end of a wonderful and exhausting week! I got a really interesting email from a friend saying it had been great to hear about my perfect family gathering. Oooops, I hope I didn’t say that! Family is a wonderful, complex, mysterious, and ever moving target! I suspect my family is no different than every one else’s. The only difference is they are “my” family, and for each of us that makes all the difference. This morning as we gathered for our last big family breakfast a number of things happened that altered my view of family! Before I share those things, let me say that families are made up of human beings and as a group (the human race), we are pretty diverse and different people!
I think it is normal to have things we love about others and things we don’t. That doesn’t make anyone good or bad, it just means we have to work harder in relationships, because of the differences. I’m certain if you asked Sherelene if that is true, she could give you a long laundry list of things about me that can be, or are, down right challenging!
Before everyone parted this morning we had our traditional prayer in a circle where we asked God to bless and protect each family especially those that would be traveling. I asked God to help each of us look for the good in one another. After the prayer Abigail, my youngest grand daughter insisted in a loud voice “family hug!” The little ones like to get in the center of the circle as we all do a big bear hug and squeeze them in the middle, it always produces squeals of joy! Lesson One; the joy of being loved and knowing you have a place in the world. Abigail knows she has a loving mother and father, brother and this whole collection of cousins, aunts and uncles, and grand parents that love her, she can’t keep from showing it! We need to embrace the love of those that are our family.
There were some tears shed all around as it hit home that our week was over. Our family only gets together as a group once a year. Scott and Diane live in St. Augustine, Florida so getting them with the rest of the family, is difficult with so much distance, between us. My grand son Cade gets pretty shaken up when the cars are about to pull out, and he taught me the greatest lesson of the week. Lesson Two: No relationship is worth much if we don’t pour our hearts into it. If we try to protect ourselves, or our turf. If we allow ourselves to be too self absorbed, we simply miss the joy of pure love for others. Cade demonstrated that when he shed a tear about his cousins going home. Lesson Three: Life is about others not our selves. This is a really tough one, it’s hard to let go of self, but if we are going to enjoy life, and family, we have to loosen the grip on our needs, wants, desires, and fears. Trust me it is worth it!
It’s easy to get wrapped up in our own interests, but it is a wall that keeps us from experiencing the joy of unconditional, non judgmental love. Lesson Four; Children love from the heart, not the head, it might be time for me to learn to do the same…….
Blessings,
the pilgrim
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This entry was posted on Saturday, August 3rd, 2013 at 3:35 pm
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When digital start to swoop in on us in the late nineties there was great gnashing of teeth and wringing of hands! I even once said, :When the only way to make images is this new fangled digital stuff, I’m out!” I figured I would be dead and gone before we had to give up film! Guess again. Digital arrived much faster than any of us thought it would. I remember an article in Outdoor Photographer magazine in which a prominent writer said it would take 25 megapixels to equal the quality of 35mm film. I’m not naming names because we all made some wrong guesses back then! By the time digital had advanced to 12 megapixels the writing was on the wall, film was dying! By that time I had gone to work for Nikon and was experiencing the joys of the digital age, I’ve never looked back.
I remember saying a few years ago that if Nikon (my employer at the time) had told me I was going to be their film guy, i would have respectfully said, “so long!” I have fully and completely embraced digital. With the advent of 24& 36 megapixel cameras, even the view camera is obsolete (in my opinion). [That should start some cat fights!] Anyway I have over 25,000 color transparencies (slides) and over 10,000 B&W negatives in my files. What can I do with them?
For all practical purposes, with the exception of irreplaceable family slides and negatives, the rest are far inferior to my Digital production of the last 10 + years. I recently gave a company called Scan Cafe a shot at scanning a couple of thousand slides for me and the results were pretty much o.k. The two images in this blog post are from original color slides and they translated all right, but t hey are no match for a digital file! So I will have the invaluable family stuff scanned, and a few black and white negatives of significance, but he rest will be, eventually, thrown in the trash!
I will soon start producing some eBooks and I plan to do a retrospective on America From 500 Feet and America From 500 Feet II which will tell the back storya nd contain what I think are the best images from both volumes. Since the first book is only available as a used volume, I am anxious to put that project together!
So my countless slides are in many ways lost, they are a technology that is so distant that there relevance in today’s photography world is certainly limited by their technical faults. As photographs they still tell a story and so many will be preserved, but as time marches on hopefully we get better and our work from the past is less important to us, as we tell the story better both aesthetically and technically! The greatest joy is looking at the old images and remembering the fun you had producing them!
Blessings,
the pilgrim
* Both images were shot on Kodak 100Vs film pushed to 200 and that popped the grain which when reduced with noise reduction software further softens the images, one of the great issues with getting something great out of older film images.
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This entry was posted on Thursday, August 1st, 2013 at 2:09 pm
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