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Posts Tagged ‘Obscura’

Video: Brendan Barry makes 20″ x 24″ wildflower image using camera obscura and color reversal process

12 Feb

UK-based photographer Brendan Barry has used his lockdown to grow closer to nature. He’s been taking regular neighborhood walks with his daughter and learning more about the area surrounding their home in Exeter and the city’s surprising nature. They have regularly picked wildflowers on the journey, which Barry has been photographing using a color reversal process he has been developing over the last few years.

Barry’s process is ‘long and laborious and the photographs hard to achieve.’ He tells us that it can take up to eight hours to create a successful exposure, and due to the nature of the toxic chemicals he uses, he often shoots at night to protect his toddler daughter. Plus, as he says, ‘it is so peaceful and quiet then.’

Barry shoots directly to 20″ x 24″ photographic paper using a camera obscura. He has been using a color reversal process that he’s developed over the last few years to make his images.

In a project commissioned by Maketank and filmed by Chen Liu (Lynd), we go behind the scenes with Brendan Barry as he creates a 20″ x 24″ color still life of wildflowers captured directly to photographic paper. Barry uses a camera obscura and his color reversal process, which he has been working on for the last few years. The image is from his series, ‘Wildflowers picked on walks with Bea.’

The ongoing photo series is a very personal project for Barry. The subjects are collected during walks with his daughter, and the images are time-consuming and difficult to make. The images are also a reflection of the times. The lockdown is very difficult for many, and the ongoing pandemic is even more challenging in and of itself. With that said, the lockdown has also given people like Brendan Barry the chance to connected differently with their neighborhoods.

Brendan Barry carefully arranges wildflowers for a new image. Each shot can take upwards of eight hours to create from start to finish.

For Barry, he feels it is ‘vital to capture and appreciate what is here, to remind ourselves of what we have all around us, literally on our doorsteps, in the hope that we may seek to retain some of this when normality, whatever form that will take, returns.’

If Brendan Barry’s name sounds familiar, there’s a good reason. He has created many fascinating cameras and photographic projects over the years, many of which we have featured. Last October, we shared how Barry was commissioned by the Exeter Canal and Quay Trust to convert an entire room into a camera obscura. If you’d like to learn how to do that, we also covered a tutorial from Barry about this topic last spring.

During the lockdown, Barry converted his backyard shed into a camera and darkroom, which he has used as part of his wildflower series.

In 2019, Barry transformed the 46th floor of the 101 Park Avenue skyscraper in New York City into a massive camera obscura. That same year, he also converted a shipping container into a camera, which he called ‘the world’s biggest, slowest, and most impractical Polaroid camera.’

If you’d like to see more of Brendan Barry’s work, visit his website and follow him on Instagram. He’s always up to something awesome.


Image credits: All images used with kind permission from Brendan Barry.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Photographer Brendan Barry creates a giant camera obscura using a customs house

02 Oct

Photographer Brendan Barry was commissioned by the Exeter Canal and Quay Trust to turn a room in the Custom House in Exeter, U.K. into a large camera obscura.

Barry had a residency at the Custom House in Exeter and during his time, he used a variety of analog cameras to capture images of Exeter Quay. Of his work, Barry says, ‘My work aims to challenge our understanding of what a camera is, what it can do and how one can be constructed, taking the whole notion of what a camera might be, unpicking these preconceptions and creating new ways of inviting an audience into having a transformative experience in a space.’

Image credit: Brendan Barry

Brendan continues, ‘During my residency at the Custom House I will be transforming a number of rooms in the building into giant cameras and using them to capture images of Exeter Quay using a range of analog photographic processes and techniques.’ Barry created a very informative video of the experience, which can be seen below. In his video, Brendan shows the entire process, from his approach to building a camera obscura and the equipment he uses to create large prints.

As you can see, Brendan required a lot of equipment for his project. After getting his equipment into the upstairs room, he must create a large frame with a backboard to hold the photographic paper. Next is setting up the lens holder in the room’s window, blacking out the rest of the window and setting up a holder for a graduated neutral density filter to ensure a balanced exposure.

Image credit: Brendan Barry

This is not Brendan Barry’s first foray with making a large analog camera. You can check out Barry’s previous projects in which Barry turned his shed into a camera, as well as an older project wherein he turned a skyscraper into a camera obscura.

If you’d like to see more videos from Brendan Barry, be sure to check out his YouTube channel. To see more of his work, visit his website and follow him on Instagram.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Obscura 2 app updates interface, adds new histogram visualizer and keyboard shortcuts

08 Feb

Obscura 2, an iOS camera app developed by Ben McCarthy, has released an update that adds a histogram visualizer, iPad keyboard shortcuts, a redesigned image viewer and more.

The most obvious change in the updated is the new image viewer interface. Now, the various settings, controls and filters are organized into card-style dialogs within the interface. While this does take up more real estate for each setting, it provides a cleaner look and helps to compartmentalize the various settings.

The new histogram integration provides real-time exposure data by overlaying bars on the bottom of the the the app, behind the buttons. It’s nice the histogram is subtle, but it’d be nice to have an option to change the color/opacity on the bars, because the dark grey on black can sometimes be difficult to see.

On iPads, the update adds keyboard shortcuts for taking photos, switching between camera and library modes, applying filters, and navigating through photos that have been captured. Sure, the iPad isn’t a camera-first device in any sense, but it’s nice to see McCarthy add this sort of functionality.

Overall, it’s a solid update with a cleaner UI and a number of functional improvements. Obscura 2 is available on the iOS App Store for $ 4.99.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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This $31 lens will turn any room into a camera obscura

20 Jul

Turning a room into a camera obscura is as easy as blacking out the room and poking a pinhole into one of the window covers. But if you want to take your camera obscura game to brighter, more colorful heights, the Bonfoton Camera Obscura Room Lens is definitely worth a look.

This portable lens was designed to snap onto blackout curtains or into some other window cover. Then, once the room is dark enough and the outside world is bright enough, the lens will project the outside in: plastering a picture of the view from that window onto your walls, upside-down.

Here’s an example from the Bonfoton website:

A hotel room can become something else entirely through the magic of the camera obscura.

The lens was designed by husband and wife team Tommi and Annika, who say they founded the store because of the joy the camera obscura brought to their friends and family.

“We founded the Bonfoton store after we saw what the Camera Obscura room does to people emotionally when they see the effect for the first time,” explains the couple. “From a child only a few years old to a grandpa age 65 the amazement is the same. First a WOW! Or the OMG!? And then the silent stare when they realize that the image is alive and moving.”

The little company is based in southern Finland, where every lens is made more-or-less by hand. To buy one for yourself, head over to their shop and be ready to drop 27 Euro (~$ 31 USD)

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Ilford Obscura: Reduktion in 4×5

24 Apr

© Marc von Martial

Ein Beitrag von: Marc von Martial

Lochkamerafotografie (engl. pinhole photography) ist wohl mit die reduzierteste Art, zu fotografieren. Mit wenig Aufwand ist ein Basismodell selbst gebaut, im Prinzip reicht ein Schuhkarton. Die Möglichkeiten beim Bau und beim Fotografieren sind jedoch schier unendlich. Schwarzweiß-Film oder Farbe, Sofortbild oder Direktpositiv, Papier, Röntgenfilm oder selbstgepanschte Fotoemulsionen, ganz egal. Alles, was irgendwie lichtempfindlich ist, lässt sich mit einer Lochkamera relativ einfach belichten.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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Blickfang: Obscura

18 Feb

Vor anderthalb Wochen bekam ich einen Liebesbrief. „Obscura“*: Ein Liebesbrief an die Lochkamera-Fotografie, geschrieben von fünf Frauen mit den verliebten Blicken von über 90 Fotografen. Dieser Brief ist ein Buch mit elf Kapiteln, abstrakten Blicken und Poesie – ein bisschen wie das Leben selbst.

Aufmerksam wurde ich auf das Buchprojekt, an dem die Macherinnen insgesamt über zwei Jahre arbeiteten, im letzten Mai über die dazugehörige Kampagne auf der Crowdfunding-Plattform Indiegogo. Seitdem wurden die Fotos für das Buch ausgewählt, der ganze Brocken gelayoutet, gedruckt und an die Unterstützer verschickt.

Es ist so dunkel.
Wir brauchen Licht.
Einen Sonnenstrahl, vielleicht.

Herausgekommen ist – wie meine Überschwänglichkeit wahrscheinlich schon angedeutet hat – mehr als nur ein Fotoband. Die Aufteilung des Buches in Kapitel mit Namen wie „Das Monströse“, „Die Verlockung“ oder „Die Wirrnis“ sorgt für neue Bezüge zwischen den in diese Kategorien eingeordneten Bildern.

Zu jedem Bild gibt es einige Zeilen Informationen zum Fotografen, Ort und Technik der Aufnahme. Dazu kommen eingestreute kleine Gedichte und ein Layout, das das großzügige Format angenehm luftig und ohne Schnickschnack nutzt, ohne in die Beliebigkeit so manch anderer aktueller Publikation zu verfallen.

Gleich das Titelbild von einer der Herausgeberinnen, Larissa Honsek, hatte es mir von Anfang an angetan. Und obwohl sich unter den restlichen 120 seltsamen, schönen, lustigen und verblüffenden Lochkamera-Aufnahmen viele andere finden, die ich mag, bin ich trotzdem an diesem Foto, „Untitled“, hängengeblieben.

© Larissa Honsek

Es ist nicht unter „Das Monströse“, „Das Diffuse“ oder gar „Das Unheimliche“ eingeordnet, sondern eröffnet das Kapitel „Die Verlockung“. Ein leuchtendes, glimmendes, auf langen Bahnen Funken versprühendes, zu allem Überfluss auch noch schwebendes Etwas aus Licht. Gelborangerot, in einem Nadelwald mit Schneeboden.

Ich erinnere mich an die alten Fragen aus den Philosophie-Unterrichtsstunden dieses Landes: Rauscht das Meer auch, wenn niemand zuhört? Macht ein im Wald umfallender Baum ein Geräusch, wenn niemand da ist, es zu hören? Und ich frage mich: Geschehen die Wunder auch, wenn niemand da ist, ihnen beizuwohnen?

Obwohl wir unseren Planeten überbevölkern, gibt es doch zum Glück noch so viel einsame, unbewohnte Fläche. Wiesen, Felder und Wälder, in die sich nur selten eine Menschenseele verirrt. Wenn sich also eine Delegation Außerirdische, ein Wesen aus einer anderen Dimension, eine spontane Zusammenballung von Energie oder einfach nur ein Riss in Raum und Zeit solch ein Fleckchen Erde für seinen Auftritt aussuchen würde – es ist, als wäre es nicht geschehen, weil wir nicht da waren.

Larissa Honseks Arbeit lässt mich einen solchen herbeifantasierten Moment mitansehen. Unwahrscheinlich natürlich, dass ich ihn einmal leibhaftig miterleben werde, ich warte nicht darauf, aber ich gebe zu: Das Kribbeln beim Gedanken daran ist das gleiche wohlige Kribbeln, das mich bei Streifzügen in die unberührte Natur begleitet. Und: Wer weiß.

 

Informationen zum Buch

„Obscura – 121 Blicke – 121 views“*
Verlag: Revolver Books
Auflage: 800 Stück
Seiten: 200
Sprachen: Deutsch, Englisch
Maße: 28 x 28 x 2 cm
Einband: Hardcover, gebunden
Preis: 39 €


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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