Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/10/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Wow, Ted, I wasn't expecting *that*! Thank you. I have sweated blood & tears over this project, so this means a lot. I must have made ten or twenty versions of it before I finally learned how to make it look like I wanted. For those who are interested, the print in question was of this picture: http://www.pinkheadedbug.com/humantraffic/portfolio_15/pages/010.html The print was made using the wonderful piezography system (www.piezography.com) favoured by our very own Tina Manley (BD just bought one, too, I think), using an Epson 1160 to print onto Somerset Enhanced paper with the Cone inkset. The neg (an extremely thin one) was scanned on a Polaroid Sprintscan 4000, and pretty heavily corrected in Photoshop... I think it had something like five or six layer masks plus a LOT of manual burning and dodging... I cannot even begin to imagine how I could achieve the same results in a darkroom. It would have been a real Eugene Smith enterprise, certainly involving rephotographing the print on 4x5, bleaching back the highlights, probably using a contrast mask... AKKKK! Thanks again, Ted. I hope this will convince some people that inkjet prints are just as much 'real photographs' as silver prints. on 1/10/00 12:07 am, Ted Grant at tedgrant@home.com wrote: > Hi folks, > > This is in praise of one of the LUG's extra ordinaire street > photographers ! :-) > > Our very own Johnny Deadman! > > The other day it was my very good fortune to receive a gorgeous B&W real > live 11 X 17 print from his series ... "Human Traffic" As many of you, > I've looked at the various images Johnny has posted on this series, some > blew me away, others created questions, awe and, "well OK John, what > the hell is this?" > > Often I wondered how good they'd look on real paper, under daylight > scrutinizing as a print and not an electronic image. Trust me, if all > his prints look anywhere close to the one I now have before me, they are > the fine work of a talented artist! > > The print has a tonal richness with a depth I've never seen in wet > darkroom prints. Even prints of fine art shooters don't seem to have the > same depth effect.. > > Is it the depth of the print tones ( ? ) the film developing (?) the > printer combined with the Piezography (sp) inks? Whatever, it's a > wonderful new way to look at how to make ones prints. But it's the rich > quality I'm amazed at!. > > It's the same kind of rich depth I saw in "Mom" Tina Manley's prints at > the Leica Seminar. Many of us have admired her work on the screen, but > in real prints her photographs take on a whole new meaning of richness > and feeling, the likes no screen on earth can match! > > B.D. showed me a portfolio of smaller prints on 8 1/2 X 11 heavy duty > paper illustrating a similar rich depth of quality. So what do we learn > from these three fine photographers? A new day has dawned in the world > of printing where you don't have to turn out the lights and mix > chemicals! Gawd I'll miss it! ;-) > > It's not too often I get wound up on new fangled photographic methods, > however, in all seriousness those who've pooh poohed this dry print > method, including yours truly, we might just take another look, as it's > quite remarkable. > > Now back to our Johnny Deadman.... Thank you for a wonderful photograph ! > > ted > Victoria, Canada > http://www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant - -- John Brownlow http://www.pinkheadedbug.com