Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Glen- Not at all: Back then, if a century ago is the age, photographers spent long apprenticeships to become experts in what they did. No meters- exposure as we used to say, "By Guess, or By God!" You had to go into a darkroom, pour colloidion, a mixture of ether and nitrate of cellulose mixed into a syrup, onto a glass plate. Rotate the plate till it was completely covered, pour off the excess, let dry until it was just tacky- then dip it into a bath of silver nitrate, then salt water, I believe to form a wet solution of silver chloride on the plate. You rushed to get it into a holder and into the camera before it dried. Made the exposure then developed it, fixed it, washed it, and dried it. Couldn't very well snap off 5 fps with that rig! I would imagine that if you took a larger format shot, using the same light, slow film filtered to use the red blue end of the spectrum, and a good quality exhibition type, silver rich paper, you could very well duplicate the results, or at least the look/! Dan - -----Original Message----- From: Glen M. Robinson <gmrobinson@imation.com> To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Date: Thursday, June 03, 1999 10:31 AM Subject: [Leica] A Humbling Experience > > > I just received a humbling experience. My wife purchased a photo album at >a garage sale yesterday that contained family portraits from Renaas Studio in >Decorah, Iowa. No one at the sale had a clue who these people are and the date >when these pictures were taken, but based on the clothes they are wearing we >guess that the photographs are at least a century old if not older. > > I have been an amateur photographer for forty or so years and have done my >own darkroom work during much of this time. I use Leicas, Rolleis, and Canons >and enlarge my Ilford 100 Delta and Kodak Tri-X negatives processed with XTOL >and D-76 with Schneider apo lenses. > > I am terribly humbled by these antique pictures; I cannot produce this type >quality with my high tech gear. The sharpness, gradation, and other visual >characteristics of these prints are breathtaking. I realize that these pictures >are contact prints, but are the wonderful films and lenses that we use today in >reality lower in quality in the essential operating parameters than those of >that time? > > Glen Robinson > >