From the Prosper Road: A Pinhole Moment

Fine Art PrintsBio

Yesterday was a wonderful day.  I received my 4 x 5 color negatives  from Citizens Photo in Portland (http://www.citizensphoto.com/),  the only place in the Northwest that will develop this film.  Thank you Citizen’s Photo, you did a great job. Two weeks ago, I drove up the Lost Coast of California  with  a friend also known as the Master of the Road Trip and here are the two images from our  Punta Gorda adventure:  one a image from my new fancy expensive  DSLR (see blog post, Paradise is a Road Trip) and one from my 4 x 5 pinhole camera on color negative film.  I have been anxiously awaiting the arrival of the negative film from the lab.  I am happy to report that I love the pinhole image very much. The pinhole image holds onto the feeling surrounding the moment,  not just the moment itself.  Let me explain:  up on that ridge on the  Prosper Road, the wind was whipping from the west off the Pacific Ocean.  It was the Golden Hour.  We were dressed in sweatshirts and hats and long pants because there was a chill in the air.  The light glowed and the ocean, far below, crashed and sang its own tune.  It was a moment in which I felt totally alert and totally relaxed at that same time.  It was all about the light and the wind and the sound of the waves hitting the beach.  How do light and moment translate feeling onto film?  What does the print have to do with it?  The print of the pinhole is soft and sweet and beautiful.  I printed one only and it is so close to done.   The DSLR print I keep trying to make it less perfect. I can’t seem to get it right.   Why is that?

FromWhisperRidge

Prosper Road to Cape Mendocino, Digital Image from my DSLR camera,   f16, 1/20 second, ISO 400

prosperroadtocapemendicino_pinholediptych

Prosper Road to Cape Mendocino, Pinhole Camera Exposure on 4 x 5 inch color negative film, two negatives scanned and stitched together in Photoshop.  f256/120 seconds, ISO 400.

These images were exposed at almost exactly the same time.  Go figure.

 

Some Pinholes from Civita

Some Pinholes from Civita

I spent  a month in Civita di Bagnoregio, an Etruscan hilltop town in Italy on a fellowship from the Civita Institute, (civitainstitute.org). Since I arrived home mid-December, I have been scanning and editing images. I am still not done but three days ago, finished...

Civita:  A Month at Night

Civita: A Month at Night

I have been in Civita di Bagnoregio for the past month shooting pinhole photographs on a fellowship.  Civita is a surreal, isolated hilltop town north of Rome and I fell in love with It.  It survived largely due to the work of an architect, Astra Zarina and her...

Connie

Connie

Has it really been almost seven years since you passed ?  So many of our times together seem like they just happened.  I have been channeling you babe, makes me want be better, as if you were still here.  So my resolution for this year is to cook! Yes cook real...