December is the month where the Winter Solstice occurs, and in human history, the end of the shortening days and beginning of longer days has not gone unnoticed. Lights have a way of chasing out the darkness, and while in our modern society we have no lack of artificial light, it is hard to imagine what our ancestors thought a few thousand years ago. The Solstice became the focus of many traditions, and a celebration to mark the appearance of longer days ahead. For me, Christmas has always been about the tree and the lights, and the excitement of the season. However you celebrate this season, I hope that peace and happiness becomes more attainable.
Photography is one of those things that has sustained me over time -- in terms of creativity, activity, and making connections. I think I have met some of the most amazing people that carry around cameras. I plan on shooting more medium format this coming year, and also thinning down my accumulation of 35mm cameras. I still plan on testing and reporting on random cameras -- hence this blog, and my association with the Film Photography Project.
I hope that more people keep coming to using film and finding how fun it can be. You can simplify everything down to one body and a few lenses (or just one lens) and yet have a bunch of film stocks that have such different characteristics that will open up the artistic and creative process to all sorts of possibilities. Shoot at ISO 6 sometime and see how those films determine what is possible. Black and white emulsions, C-41 color, E-6 color-- there are all sorts of possibilities in 35mm. 120 film has fewer choices, but those bigger negatives sure are nice. Large format? I rarely shoot that, but of you are looking for a challenge, go for it!
This has been quite a year for me, and on top of everything else, I find myself retired after working for 36.5 years at the University of Michigan. My career has been in Natural History, more precisely, Entomology, and managing museum collections. I have some research projects that I want to finish, and that will happen in the coming year. I plan to devote myself more to doing photo projects as well. Over the years, I have accumulated enough of a body of work to proceed with some small exhibits, and perhaps some publications on Blurb or elsewhere.
I hope that you like my cameras on the tree this year!
No comments:
Post a Comment
If you are trying to spam, sell digital crap, link to an external sales site, it will be deleted. I welcome respectful dialog and comments.
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.