Back in time
D3Sshooter
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During one off my last industrial urban explorations , I found an old negative on gelatin glass plate picture in an old drawer of a desk. Needless to say that I was thrilled , as the people on the negative were standing in the same place as I was standing, but then 100 years later. Based on the type of negative, the clothing of those workers, the die-cast hand water pumps in their molds and the history of the factory (foundry) , it had to be from the early 1900's. So I took the glassplate home and worked on the reproduction of a digital positive version. When that came to light , WoW. I was stunned.
So here it is folks,
Taken in this factory (pic below ) or read this
Thanks for viewing…..
So here it is folks,
Taken in this factory (pic below ) or read this
Thanks for viewing…..
A photographer without a style, is like a pub without beer
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Comments
Sam
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
Hi David,
They are casting water pumps, maybe you might know the types with a single arm/lever that needs moving up and down on a pivot point. Inside the cast there is a pistion very much zo like in a car engine but then with a whole and valve in the middle of the piston that closed when the piston goes up. Hence causing a vacuum under the piston (suction ) and the water is sucked up through the waterpipe from the well .When going down , the valve opens and the water flows through the valve and assembles above the pistion. It can's be pushed back in the watertubes as there is a end valve in the well blocking the return.
When the pistion moves back up, the water above the valve is push out of a sprout , and new water is sucked in.
TXS Javier,
That is very easy, here is how i did it:
1. Use a softbox and mask the entire surface with a light blocking material ( I used carton)
(Softbox is a flashlight with a lightshaper on it. the surface is typical a white cloth to create even light)
2. Cut a rectangle whole in the middle of the cardboard so that the glass plate just fits in it.
3. Place the card board on the softbox, so that no other light can come through except the whole.
4. Turn on the pilot light of the softbox (steady light, sometime called model light).
5. Place your camera on a tripot.
6. zoom to the size of the openenin
7. focus on spot, and light metering on spot
8. set aperture to F9 , iso as low as possible, and adjust the shutterspeed so that your lightmeter (in camera) is about 1/3 step above 0 (that will assure the whites are white and not gray)
9. set wb to auto , as the glass plate is negative anyhow and take a shot of the opening in the cardboard
10. Place the glass plate in the opening
11. Set your camera to manual focus , and use lifeview or thetered shooting methods to adjust manual the sharpness, the reason is that the glass has a certain thickness and the actual gelatin is on the back holding the image.
12.Once in focus take the shot (in RAW)
13. In LR adjust the sharpness, contrast and WB based on the shot of the white opening.
14, In Photoshop, open the picture from LR and create a layer
15. Invert the layer
16. Voila here is your picture, you might want to work on a few little things like taken some scratches away etc ….
17. And I forgot to mention, use an absolute dark room , and if you can cover the camera with a black cloth as the glass will reflect the even the smallest light point.
I hope that helped
An "accurate" reproduction of a scene and a good photograph are often two different things.
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