Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/03/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On 3/4/2010 4:17 PM, Mark Rabiner wrote: >> When I was in art school, the photo professor used to tell the students >> that >> if you can't make it good, make it big. LOL >> >> I personally prefer smaller, more intimate prints. >> >> >> -- >> Chris Crawford >> > My standard as most photographers was 11x14's for decades. Shows could be > 11x14 but got to me mainly 16x20. > Sometimes I'd go through an 8x10 phase. As would my friends it seemed. > Right now my default is an idiosyncratic 5x7. Not a real popular size you > hear of people printing in but I like it. > Not tiny because for more than a year there I was carrying around a > portfolio of 4x5's in a 4x5 sheet film box. Big enough to see. > You can have them with you in your top shirt pocket. > Becaue what good is a print if you don't have it with you? > A 5x7 you can put it on the wall. Not the ideal size. But go to MOMA or the > MET and they have thousands of images that size on the walls. > Here in NY I have a 16x20 portfolio with 18 16x20 darkroom prints in it an > 6 > 13 x 19's which had been made on my 2200. They look like shrunken heads > compared to the other prints. Not a good deal. The 16x20 box is a little > too > big to bring to a Starbucks to show a visiting Lug Nut. I'm not going to > print 17x22's and cut them down to fit that box. I'm just going to have to > start a 17x22 inch box. Maybe with wheels on the bottom of one side. > > I have a black one inch thick 11x14 portfolio box filled with a mix of > darkroom and inkjets. > My newest box I got here while in NY (3.3 years) is my 11x17 box. > Which I used to think of as not cut down to 11x14s but these skinny > pictures > have a charm of their own. One of which is you can go into a store and buy > the stuff. Its what they are selling. They are mainly from the display I > had in Manchester England last year they were behind 22x22 inch sheets of > glass on the wall at Jem's The Real Camera Company And taken mainly with > real cameras. > But a main size is always going to be 8.5 x 11 formally 8x10. I have both 1 > and 2 inch thick boxes of those. > > I am joining the LUG gallery this week for sure and having just shot the > best roll of non film I ever have in my life right after midnight February > 3 > I'll have that popping up on my calendar every year. And have that be the > first thing I post to the LUG Gallery. > > I have an 11x14 overfilled case with handle and zipper holding tear sheets. > Stuff clipped out of magazines and newspapers. Brochures even. > > My printer goes to 17x22 but I've not made one yet. Nor bought the paper. > Its gratifying to think that if I got a tremendous break and a show in > Chelsea or anywhere (Brooklyn) I could just print it right here right now > on > that. On my 3800. > > Walk into Adorama or Calumet and the very first thing you have to get > yourself by is the tall stacks of inkjet paper being sold. Much of it > quality stuff. So sombody out there is printing other than me. > > I went to the graduation show at Tisch photography school down at NYU it > was prints on the walls but they did have a projector going on auto in a > back room projecting jpegs which people were ignoring for the most part. > > The currency in the practice of photography now may be jpegs.... > But more and more people are finding out a jpeg can be bad check. > An hedge fund of pixels that don't play out in the end. Galleries are > asking > to see results before they ok a show. > The true coin of the realm remains the print. Hard copy. Money in hand. > Hang on your wall. Stick in a book or box. > > The best jpegs I've seen on the LUG is the one of Ted in front of his > prints > at his last show a few weeks ago. And of Gary Todoroff's shots of his > murals a few days ago. He needs one with him standing in front or side of > them though. > > > > > > > > [Rabs] > Mark William Rabiner > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > > I like the 5x7 print format a lot. I also have a lot of 4x5" mounted in 16x20" mattes. In the darkroom, I also printed a lot of 11x14 and 16x20. 16x20 was nice for the 4x5" negs I mainly used at that time. Most of my later printing was platinum/palladium and 8x10 image size (on larger paper), because the neg was 8x10 and it is a contact printing thing. Now that I am using "35mm" (digital) I like the 11x17 and 13x19. On 11x17 I can make a 9.5 x 14.5" print that still has a nice border, and on 13x19 an 11x16.5 print or even 12x18. I am pretty well tied up until the end of April, but maybe by then the Epson 3880 will be available. No rush, I do not make my living from photography, for which my family is eternally grateful. Ken Carney Oklahoma City, Oklahoma