May 13, 2013
This is a photograph of a city, Minneapolis, in the daytime. on Flickr.Crown Graphic | 135mm f/4.7 Optar (wide open/titled) | Arista/Foma 100 (@80) | R60 filter | Grad ND filter | Rodinal (1:50)
Recently, I’ve been taking Highway 55 to downtown which takes you through a not-so-nice part of town that has some great vantage points of the skyline. I think it’s interesting to see the city with the industrial part of town in the foreground. Don’t get me wrong, the Stone Arch Bridge and all is a nice area, but you’ll run into about 500 other photographers there, aiming their cameras at the same place you are. This view (above) had always intrigued me as I drove by, so last weekend I decided to venture through the maze of road construction from my apartment in Longfellow to this spot, on a dead end of a road that runs parallel to Olson Memorial Highway (the other name for 55). I was standing in a field of spring-long grass and it was windy as hell. My camera tipped over once with the lens extended and everything, but thank goodness for cameras built like tanks. All I had to do was pick it up and re-level it and it was good to go. I suppose I’ll tire of this “tilting” business sooner or later; I mean, I can do it whenever I want on Instagram. But there’s something like the real thing (notice the swirl of the old, wide open, tilted lens in the bottom corners) that makes it special. The ability to isolate an important element (the skyline) in a scene while also noting its context (Industrial North Minneapolis) is the key to this technique. The 135mm lens is the equivalent of about a 40mm lens on a 35mm camera. It’s a pretty wide normal lens, so taking landscape shots like this can be difficult if you don’t have a way of isolating your subject, be it through a vignette, good light, or tilt (or all of the above).
All analog all day.

This is a photograph of a city, Minneapolis, in the daytime. on Flickr.

Crown Graphic | 135mm f/4.7 Optar (wide open/titled) | Arista/Foma 100 (@80) | R60 filter | Grad ND filter | Rodinal (1:50)

Recently, I’ve been taking Highway 55 to downtown which takes you through a not-so-nice part of town that has some great vantage points of the skyline. I think it’s interesting to see the city with the industrial part of town in the foreground. Don’t get me wrong, the Stone Arch Bridge and all is a nice area, but you’ll run into about 500 other photographers there, aiming their cameras at the same place you are. This view (above) had always intrigued me as I drove by, so last weekend I decided to venture through the maze of road construction from my apartment in Longfellow to this spot, on a dead end of a road that runs parallel to Olson Memorial Highway (the other name for 55). I was standing in a field of spring-long grass and it was windy as hell. My camera tipped over once with the lens extended and everything, but thank goodness for cameras built like tanks. All I had to do was pick it up and re-level it and it was good to go. I suppose I’ll tire of this “tilting” business sooner or later; I mean, I can do it whenever I want on Instagram. But there’s something like the real thing (notice the swirl of the old, wide open, tilted lens in the bottom corners) that makes it special. The ability to isolate an important element (the skyline) in a scene while also noting its context (Industrial North Minneapolis) is the key to this technique. The 135mm lens is the equivalent of about a 40mm lens on a 35mm camera. It’s a pretty wide normal lens, so taking landscape shots like this can be difficult if you don’t have a way of isolating your subject, be it through a vignette, good light, or tilt (or all of the above).

All analog all day.

April 28, 2013
St. Anthony Falls on Flickr.

St. Anthony Falls on Flickr.

April 24, 2013
Minnehaha Falls No. 1 on Flickr.

Minnehaha Falls No. 1 on Flickr.

April 11, 2013

Target Field, 2013

October 23, 2012
Minneapolis Iconography No. 3: The Minneapolis Public Library on Flickr.Yashica Mat LM | Yashinon 80mm f/3.5 | Fuji Acros | Rodinal (1:100) semi-stand | Silver Efex 2  
The Minneapolis Public Library is a great addition to Downtown Minneapolis, and no, it’s not a pyramid!

Minneapolis Iconography No. 3: The Minneapolis Public Library on Flickr.

Yashica Mat LM | Yashinon 80mm f/3.5 | Fuji Acros | Rodinal (1:100) semi-stand | Silver Efex 2

The Minneapolis Public Library is a great addition to Downtown Minneapolis, and no, it’s not a pyramid!

October 11, 2012
Minneapolis Iconography #1: The Washington Avenue Bridge + The Weisman Art Museum on Flickr.Yashica Mat LM | Yashinon 80mm f/3.5 | 40s | Fuji Acros 100 | Rodinal (1:100) | Autopano Pro | Silver Efex Pro 2 
This is the first in my new series Minneapolis Iconography. This series will show icons of this great city in what I hope is a unique, dramatic way. I plan to shoot this series on black and white medium format film. This particular photograph is actually three frames stitched together on the computer before post. I love the hybrid workflow: film is unmatched with respect to its exposure latitude, resolution, and tonality, while digital is unmatched in its potential for post-production. Stay tuned for more in this series, they will be on sale in my Etsy shop in the coming weeks.

Minneapolis Iconography #1: The Washington Avenue Bridge + The Weisman Art Museum on Flickr.

Yashica Mat LM | Yashinon 80mm f/3.5 | 40s | Fuji Acros 100 | Rodinal (1:100) | Autopano Pro | Silver Efex Pro 2 

This is the first in my new series Minneapolis Iconography. This series will show icons of this great city in what I hope is a unique, dramatic way. I plan to shoot this series on black and white medium format film. This particular photograph is actually three frames stitched together on the computer before post. I love the hybrid workflow: film is unmatched with respect to its exposure latitude, resolution, and tonality, while digital is unmatched in its potential for post-production. Stay tuned for more in this series, they will be on sale in my Etsy shop in the coming weeks.

October 7, 2012
Waiting, Watching on Lake Calhoun on Flickr.

Waiting, Watching on Lake Calhoun on Flickr.

October 1, 2012
Glowing Guthrie Theater on Flickr.Yashica Mat LM | Fuji Acros 100 | Rodinal (1:100)  
I’m constantly rediscovering why I really love medium format film cameras. Not only are they quirky (looking at you Holga and Yashica), but they deliver some beautiful negatives. I’ve been going through my “archives” of the past few months and seeing if any negatives jumped out at me that I might’ve overlooked previously. This one definitely did. As the past year has gone by and my photography (including my digital darkroom skills!) has progressed, I can see more in an image than I could actually do in the past. In other words, my final product can now more closely match what I saw in the image in the first place. I’m excited to see what I can do in year 2 of this photography affliction…

Glowing Guthrie Theater on Flickr.

Yashica Mat LM | Fuji Acros 100 | Rodinal (1:100)

I’m constantly rediscovering why I really love medium format film cameras. Not only are they quirky (looking at you Holga and Yashica), but they deliver some beautiful negatives. I’ve been going through my “archives” of the past few months and seeing if any negatives jumped out at me that I might’ve overlooked previously. This one definitely did. As the past year has gone by and my photography (including my digital darkroom skills!) has progressed, I can see more in an image than I could actually do in the past. In other words, my final product can now more closely match what I saw in the image in the first place. I’m excited to see what I can do in year 2 of this photography affliction…

May 7, 2012
The Weisman Art Museum: A Holgarama on Flickr.Holga BC135 | Kodak Plus-x | XTOL (1:1) | post-processed in Topaz Adjust
I’m fascinated by the intersection of analog and digital technology. There’s nothing like shooting with a film camera and the freedom that digital processing affords allows a lot of creativity once your negative is scanned. I’m not going to get into the digital vs. film debate because I think both have their place in a photographer’s toolbox. For this shot, I decided to embrace the Weisman Art Museum’s wonderful curves, Holga’s dreamy lens and ability to overlap frames, and the power of tonemapping, which highlights local contrast most often used in digital camera photos. It’s a tool best used minimally, but for the dreamy, unfocused, and overlapping look this image already possessed, I thought it worked out very well!

The Weisman Art Museum: A Holgarama on Flickr.

Holga BC135 | Kodak Plus-x | XTOL (1:1) | post-processed in Topaz Adjust

I’m fascinated by the intersection of analog and digital technology. There’s nothing like shooting with a film camera and the freedom that digital processing affords allows a lot of creativity once your negative is scanned. I’m not going to get into the digital vs. film debate because I think both have their place in a photographer’s toolbox. For this shot, I decided to embrace the Weisman Art Museum’s wonderful curves, Holga’s dreamy lens and ability to overlap frames, and the power of tonemapping, which highlights local contrast most often used in digital camera photos. It’s a tool best used minimally, but for the dreamy, unfocused, and overlapping look this image already possessed, I thought it worked out very well!

March 2, 2012
the great minnesota get-together #1 on Flickr.Yashica Mat LM | Kodak Portra 400
I have really enjoyed the results of my first few rolls of color film shot on a medium format camera. I don’t expect to abandon black and white anytime soon (since processing costs are less than a dollar compared to $10+ per roll of color), but I hope to shoot color occasionally for a change of pace. This is from a few weeks ago. I walked through the Minnesota State Fair grounds, which was pretty much deserted. Quite the difference from those two weeks during the summer, where millions of people meander through. This is a shot of the Giant Slide, a childhood favorite! I wonder where the burlap sacks are, maybe I can get in a few lonely, cold runs….

the great minnesota get-together #1 on Flickr.

Yashica Mat LM | Kodak Portra 400

I have really enjoyed the results of my first few rolls of color film shot on a medium format camera. I don’t expect to abandon black and white anytime soon (since processing costs are less than a dollar compared to $10+ per roll of color), but I hope to shoot color occasionally for a change of pace. This is from a few weeks ago. I walked through the Minnesota State Fair grounds, which was pretty much deserted. Quite the difference from those two weeks during the summer, where millions of people meander through. This is a shot of the Giant Slide, a childhood favorite! I wonder where the burlap sacks are, maybe I can get in a few lonely, cold runs….

February 5, 2012
Roll-a-week 4/52 on Flickr.Yashica Mat LM| 80mm f/3.5 | Kodak Tri-X 400 (exposed 1250) | Diafine 4+4
Ah, four weeks into the roll-a-week challenge. I think this is my first roll where all of the frames are properly exposed! Progress! I was having a minor crisis of confidence in my metering ability, after one roll was very over-exposed and the next was very under-exposed. I think my problem was over-reliance on my meter, which caused me in one case to expose for the brightest highlights in a very shadowy shot (a snow river). In addition to that faux pas, I also tried putting my 52mm red filter over the lens hood and surprise, surprise, guess what marred the corner in most of my shots?! No matter, I’m still new at this film thing, but I guess the good news is that I have 48 weeks left to practice. It was really cold when I took these shots—-the coldest its been all winter in Minnesota. I got a few keepers (I think), but at least they all turned out!
Sneak Peak: color in the coming weeks…stay tuned

Roll-a-week 4/52 on Flickr.

Yashica Mat LM| 80mm f/3.5 | Kodak Tri-X 400 (exposed 1250) | Diafine 4+4

Ah, four weeks into the roll-a-week challenge. I think this is my first roll where all of the frames are properly exposed! Progress! I was having a minor crisis of confidence in my metering ability, after one roll was very over-exposed and the next was very under-exposed. I think my problem was over-reliance on my meter, which caused me in one case to expose for the brightest highlights in a very shadowy shot (a snow river). In addition to that faux pas, I also tried putting my 52mm red filter over the lens hood and surprise, surprise, guess what marred the corner in most of my shots?! No matter, I’m still new at this film thing, but I guess the good news is that I have 48 weeks left to practice. It was really cold when I took these shots—-the coldest its been all winter in Minnesota. I got a few keepers (I think), but at least they all turned out!
Sneak Peak: color in the coming weeks…stay tuned

January 31, 2012
it’s the simple things (roll-a-week 3/52) on Flickr.Sometimes all it takes to make a good night great is a cup of coffee and a stack of pancakes (they were cooking when I took this shot and when they were done I didn’t have a chance to take a picture as I was too busy scarfing down the gloriousness that is the diner pancake. Hence its absence in the picture, but mention in the description) at the famous greasy spoon Mickey’s Diner in St. Paul.

it’s the simple things (roll-a-week 3/52) on Flickr.

Sometimes all it takes to make a good night great is a cup of coffee and a stack of pancakes (they were cooking when I took this shot and when they were done I didn’t have a chance to take a picture as I was too busy scarfing down the gloriousness that is the diner pancake. Hence its absence in the picture, but mention in the description) at the famous greasy spoon Mickey’s Diner in St. Paul.