Posts in Uncategorized
Thanksgiving 2012

Thanksgiving 2012 is here. As usual, I'm thankful for the people in my life, but this year gets an extra nod for Stephanie as this is our first holiday since we got married. Irony, though, is that we are both at our respective family homes and not together, but it doesn't diminish our excitement and thankfulness to have made this step.

I'm also thankful that we got to elope AND that our parents didn't punch us in the face.

Speaking of faces, the above photo is a shot I took of us on the 4x5 right after we got married. (Below is the POPTPOP of me taking the photo of us (I think taken by Drew). I suppose even a day as important as our wedding day can't keep me away from Pictures of People Taking Pictures of People.)

More photos to come, at some point. But for now, I'm thankful for family. Specifically Stephanie and Fin.

UncategorizedCary Norton

We got married!

More to come on this soon, but I thought I'd make a quick post to mention that Stephanie and I got married while we were away. I had work in France and we couldn't help but use that opportunity to get married. We skipped up to Glasgow, Scotland and got married in a beautiful greenhouse (Winter Gardens at the Peoples Palace) on Monday the 22nd of October. Photos and video to come eventually, but I couldn't say when just yet.

(Yes, it was planned. Almost no one knew about it. Surprise!)

Above is us at the castle in Edinburgh the next day.

UncategorizedCary Norton

POPTPOP in Sonoma Valley

When wineries attack!

Christine photographing me photographing her photographing me and photographing Nicole photographing Christine and me photographing her. Bella Winery in/near Healdsburg, California.

UncategorizedCary Norton

Bee butts and genetic variation

I'm amazed and awed pretty much every time we go into our beehives. Earlier this month I was snapping around and found this shot while looking through the shots later. Such an incredible example of genetic variation within the hive. They look nothing alike! Look at their butts! So amazing. Seriously, beekeeping is outstanding.

UncategorizedCary Norton

Granddad with some fish

I was rummaging through a folder I keep of others' images that are inspirational in some way, and buried in there I found images I'd scanned from old family negatives. Totally forgot about these, but hit the jack pot on this one of my granddad. No idea when this was, but I'm relatively confident it would have been taken in Florida—possibly Lake Okeechobee—and I'm fully confident he is amazing.

We lost him about a year and half ago, or so, and I am reminded of him often, what with having bee stuff everywhere and photos of family littered around the house. I'm so proud to be keeping bees and know that it would make him happy to know we're still doing it.

Anyway. This photo is amazing on so many levels and it really makes me happy. The whole folder was cram-packed with the most banal, slice-of-life images...it makes me want to collect the best (or worse) of them and have a whole website just for them. They're fantastic (even if fantastically bad, at times).

UncategorizedCary Norton

DIY 8x10 Camera for 15 bucks, sort of

I recently rebuilt the Legotron so it'd focus to infinity and it got me dreaming about building something else. And even though I'm not great at checking in at flickr these days, I still subscribe to the RSS of a couple of people who have work that I love. One of these is Benjamin Goss (flickr, website), a fellow I've been following for longer than I can remember. I can't even remember how I found it—I suspect a portrait group I was in or something like that—but I've always gotten into his ethereal work but I've had one of his images lodged in my head since I saw it in my google reader back in July.

So long-story-short, I decided I'd build an 8x10 field camera. A nice one, out of wood or something. Maybe throw some metal in there. So I bought an 8x10 lens as step one and promptly realized one doesn't just walkintoMordor throw together a well-made, (really) large format camera, but I had this lens and I figured I should make sure it works before I built a camera around it. So, instead, I threw one together out of foam core, which was surprisingly easy and super cost effective.

That's it up above, and below are some sample images from it, and then below that is tedious information on how to make an 8x10 for like 15 bucks, if you've got a lens* and some miscellaneous stuff laying around the house.

(*You could always make a pin hole 8x10, and there are plans all over the internet for those. This design is for a camera with a traditional len, though.)

Rob, in studio. 8 second exposure @ ƒ 64 (to semi-test shooting paper negs, even though I was shooting on ISO 100 film, metered at 40)

William and Sadie in the Cahaba River. 1/15 exposure @ wide open (still not sure what that is, actually. The lens is called a Goerz Celor F5, but the aperture is listed a good bit wider than that on the lens itself)

Stephanie at the Cahaba River. I'm not sure if I mis-focused (very likely), or if my super-low-budget ground glass was out of register, which is totally possible (and a little bit goes a long way).

So since July I've been dreaming about this ghostly smoker guy (Benjamin Goss's image) and thinking long and hard about large(r) format and paper negatives and buying or building an 8x10. I'm still in the process of some of this, but this blog post is about my trip so far in quest of shooting 8x10.

Back in 2010 I bought some 8x10 holders and film and shot a few frames on my buddy Jason's mostly-decorative, but perfect studio camera and have been meaning to get back to it since then. Haven't so much done that.

But I did recently find myself trolling eBay for a lens that would cover 8x10 and ended up finding an old Goerz Celor 10 3/4" lens (273mm) that was in rough but usable shape, and really I wasn't picky since the images I'm looking to make will probably have some strangeness to them anyway. (Lens cost about 150 bucks)

After it came in I figured out, very quickly, how impatient I was to get to play with it, and last Thursday I woke up determined to make a quick and dirty camera to test the lens. I sketched out some rough numbers at breakfast and went first thing to the art supply store to get some black foam core. I did the math and figured I needed between 4 and 5 square feet to create all the surfaces.

The surfaces I budgeted for:

-Main box, 4 walls

-Smaller box (where the lens would go), 4 walls

-Lensboard - 2 ply, full area of front of smaller box

-Film / Ground Glass holder - 5 ply, full area of back of camera

-Ground Glass thingamajig - 3 ply, same exact shape as 8x10 cut film holder

I budgeted liberally and used scraps in some places instead of cutting full pieces (I'll explain why later), so I have leftovers still, but I'd rather have too much, right?

Supplies:

-3/16" black foam core

-Gaff tape. Lots. Other tape is fine, but gaff is perfect and probably hanging around somewhere anyway.

-Sharp knife

-T-square/ cutting edge

-Something to use as a ground glass (I used a cheap, already broken piece of plexi from a hardware store)

-Sandpaper for making the (admittedly super low budget) ground glass.

Some rough measurements:

-An 8x10 cut film holder is probably somewhere close to 9 5/16" (~235mm) wide, by 12 1/8 (~308mm) tall, not counting the dark slides that poke up a bit. (little over half an inch deep)

-I knew I'd need some buffer to help keep the film holder in place, so I made the larger box 11" x 11" (~280mm) (W x H) and 10" (254mm) deep.

-The smaller box that holds the lens is just enough smaller to slip firmly inside the larger one. The foam is 3/16" thick, so accounting for two layers** of it, the smaller box is just under half an inch smaller.

-Lensboard/front of camera ended up being basically 10 3/8" (~264mm) by 10 1/2" (~267mm). I did that one in 2 layers for extra support.

-Ground Glass holder measurements (outside) were basically the same as the cut film holder, and 3 foam core layers deep (so a little over half an inch). I'll mention the window cutout later.

**Technically, I scored the larger box and folded it on the measurement on opposite corners, if that makes sense, so I actually gained some space if you measured the outside edges. But I did the same on the small box too, so it sorted washed. But I'm sure I tweaked some measurements on the fly. These are just roughly what I did.

The above are measurements from the edge of the film holder to where the film plane starts. I used this distance to make a flange that would guide and hold the film holder / ground glass insert without cutting off any image.

Those little L shaped things are part of extra spacing (ie an extra "ply") for the back of the camera.

Before I started attaching the back parts, I tried to give the wobbly box some strength with a bit of angle insert things (both pretty small..one about 3/4" tall, and the other one laying flat inside the box). Not sure how much this did, but I was doing it by the seat of my pants, so whatever.

Top view of the back of the camera.

First layer of the back..The left to right measurement of the gap there is basically 8", as that's the width of the film hole on the film holder. Note that I left the top part with a gap in it (ie I made a U shape instead of a rectangle). That was not well planned as I had to try to compensate for that later (light leak!***).

(***speaking of light leaks, the crazy line at the bottom of the frames is from the gap between the inside of the big box and the outside of the small box, at the top of the camera (and thus, bottom of the sheet of film as inserted)

Film holder on top, for perspective.

3 layers of of holder/ground glass slot taped on. Perfect height of the holder is three layers of foam core. Score!

Fit detail.

Last (5th) layer of the back of camera. I used it earlier for measurements and as a cutting template.

I cut out of the last panel a 7 1/4" by 8" (184mm x 203mm) hole for viewing the ground glass. Sure, that's not 100% viewing area, but who cares.

Built the smaller box and slipped it in to make sure it'd go.

My lens hole is basically 3" (~76mm). I just traced in the inside of the lens retainer flange. Sure, that'd be a bit small if this was a wood or metal lensboard, but I can fudge it with this material.

I made the front panel 2 ply. That meant I couldn't screw on the retaining ring, but the hole was really tight, so I just threaded the lens directly into the foam core. I could have cut out an area on the back side to account for the flange, but it wasn't really needed in this case.

"Done" camera, sans ground glass insert.

I held in the bobo ground glass from the Legotron to verify that the lens did what it was supposed to.

Sadly, I forgot to take photos of the construction process of the ground glass insert thingy, but it's basically this:

-3 ply of foam core cut to the same size as the a film holder.

-Two layers with a fully cut out window for viewing. If the ground glass is 7x8", make these windows are roughly 1/4" smaller than that, to help secure the glass.

-The inner most layer has window cut to the exact size of the ground glass, but only cut through one layer of paper and the foam. That's leaving a single layer of paper to help secure the glass on the front side. That is then reinforced with Gaff tape. See photos below for a visual. Also, I put the ground glass side toward the middle of the insert (ie slick side toward the lens) to try to approximate where the film would be in the holder. I'm sure there's a more precise way to do this, but for throwing this thing together in a day, I wasn't super worried about it. Also, I thought about rigging the back area to accept the holder from top or from right, but then I realized I could just lay the camera on its side. It's not like the thing is going to break from being on its side, and its also a very easy fix. Ha.

View from back side.

View from inside. The light area you are seeing is the foam edge where the plexi is abutting it.

Here's Winslow helping me test the completed ground glass. Nice towel.

Here I am photographing William and Sadie in the Cahaba. The camera is still on a camping chair and I'm using my tshirt as a dark cloth. Serious business.

And here are a couple more shots of the final product.

Very fun and fully suggested build!

UncategorizedCary Norton

Dad came to visit

My dad made the billion hour drive down from Nebraska recently to spend some time with Stephanie and me (bringing with him something like 7,000 tools for use with the house renovation) which proved to be a great visit. We planned out a desk that, one day, maybe we'll make, saw the bees, shot target practice, and generally caught up. Something about his Proud American shirt makes me think about the Selma story I just shot in a different light. Still working on what it is exactly.

Also, there's something about the shot of him with the bee hives that makes me really happy. It's sort of an awful photograph, but it reminds me of the photos my grandfather would take of me at his hives so that he'd have photos of me helping with the bees. An endearing point of pride and I didn't appreciate when I was younger. Also, dad's camera seems a bit of an anachronism in the age of digital photography. It still works great, no doubt, but has been replaced a thousand times over since he bought it. Some irony is that I shot these photos of him with a film camera almost as old as he is.

UncategorizedCary Norton