Thanks for that link, I have a box on the way for pinhole play. Earlier this year I figured I spent enough on filmholders and materials for the camera that I didn't want to add $80+ to the outlay for film (next WPPD, all bets are off!). Hopefully I can repair the hinge tape in one holder by the time I have film in hand. I found some book binding repair tape at Blick's that I believe should work. (Another hazard with antiques of unkknown age and provenance.)
Hehe, you could get lucky, but most of the action in ePrey auctions is in the last few minutes. A couple of months back when I bought my holders, I monitored completed sales for a week or so. The older wooden flavor actually sold for an average of $32 and the newer more modern ones, over $52. Generally the cheaper end of the sales were holders with some flaw - maybe not unusable, but missing latches or minor damage. I suppose over a longer time span you might hit an occasional flyer.
Wow. Where to start.
You are not Avadon. 8x10 portraits are... a major learning curve. Exposure, lighting, perspective, DOF, subject movement etc.
4x5 portraits are not quite as easy as you think either. Jumping from MF is easy in some respects and quite challenging in others.
I shoot 8x10 because the tonal and intense image granularity blow me away, always have. But.. I started out with 4x5, lived with it for 20 some years, moved for a short time to 5x7, then found the camera of my dreams, an early 70s Deardorff V-8. And I still have 4x5 and 5x7 backs for it but they are hardly used. I use it to shoot landscapes exclusively. Contact print (8x10 - 5x7) only.
If I were you, I would buy a quality 4x5 monorail with full movements, a couple good lens, and a 4x5 MXT enlarger. If you really like LF, then go for the gold. Learn the basics first.
tim in san jose
if you are still weighing the pros and cons, I put another vote for 8x10 or 7x9.5. I just bought the most affordable basics, a russian wooden camera, some barrel lenses, a shutter and one shuttered wide angle lens with slight scratches. all this wasn't 500$ yet. I only have 2 double holders, but I'm looking for more if I see a bargain. it's real fun already. and it's so different from smaller formats.
I mainly shoot 120 film. when most professionals moved to digital and their old gear became out of fashion, I bought myself a 4x5 technikardan. it was great to explore it, but enlargers are really really expensive. and in the end, most of my prints are 7x9.5 or 8x10. so the difference between a 120 and a 4x5 negative isn't that impressing at this size.
all I can say is that a direct print from 7x9.5 has something special, maybe it's not rational even, but I just adore it. this is my very personal opinion of course. I just wanted to let you know.
LF photography has always intrigued me but I have never taken the leap. I know that you can enter 4x5 relatively cheap me but many of the large format images that I like were shot on 8x10...
1. Are there any fashion/portrait photographers that used mostly 4x5. I really like the work from roversi, avedon, and demarchelier to name but I believe they used 8x10 and iin that industry it makes sense to "skip" 4x5..
2. Is there a cheap 8x10 settup? Learning 4x5 would be more practical/cheaper for sure but if 8x10 is what I like, then maybe that is where I should start. Well this is just a thought. I figured that 8x10 is exponentially more expensive but I have never looked into it. Starting with LF with something cheap like a Graflex seems more logical.
IMHO 8x10 work is hardly a "major learning curve" as someone claimed above. Sure, it's more labor intensive by virtue of size and bulk, but involves the exact same photographic principles as any other type of view camera traditional photography, ie. "exposure, lighting, perspective, depth of field, subject movement (you mean moving targets?)", swings, tilts and so on.
The same person above said they shoot 8x10 because of ". . .the tonal and intense image granularity blow [you] away." I really wishhe would explain what tonalty and granularity has to do with the format you're using rather than the way the film is exposed and processed.
IMHO 8x10 work is hardly a "major learning curve" as someone claimed above. Sure, it's more labor intensive by virtue of size and bulk, but involves the exact same photographic principles as any other type of view camera traditional photography, ie. "exposure, lighting, perspective, depth of field, subject movement (you mean moving targets?)", swings, tilts and so on.
The same person above said they shoot 8x10 because of ". . .the tonal and intense image granularity blow [you] away." I really wishhe would explain what tonalty and granularity has to do with the format you're using rather than the way the film is exposed and processed.
I think one could learn on an 8x10 as easily as a 4x5 but as I said in my other post, mistakes are a lot more inexpensive. It hurts less and costs less to develop a landscape and find an out of focus cable release in the foreground. And that is just one of the many common mistakes we all made (or still make).![]()
JB, I have to disagree. It seemed to me that the OP was concerned with cost and if that is the case, then learning on a cheap Graflex is very cost effective. Also, it sounded to me that he was mainly interested in studio work and can just as easily learn the basic elements with roll film as with sheet film. Why practise lighting with an 8x10?
If he has money to burn then, sure, get an 8x10 and have fun.
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