And fitted each of them with 16 daylight balanced (5500K) CFLs. The CFLs are 100 W equivalent.
I had read that a few wet-plate photographers were using them with good results for portraiture and still life photography.
Unfortunately, even at my lens largest aperture, my exposure times with this set-up for portraits have been in the 30-40s range. Although this produces for the sitter an experience similar to what people went through in the late 1800s (meaning painful and unpleasant), it made portraiture very impractical.
I thought that part of the problem was using a modern lens with multi-coating, which possibly filtered out a lot of the UV light that collodion responds so well to. I decided to look for a fairly cheap vintage (and uncoated) lens and found a 10 in. Baush and Lomb brass lens:
At this point I have mounted the lens on a temporary black foamcore lens board with black tape. I just couldn't wait to get a lens board made to try it out.
This is the first portrait I made with the B&L lens:
Rachel. |
In addition I am happy to report that my exposure time was only 12s. It seems that indeed the coating on my modern lens increases exposure time. However I also made a slight change to my chemistry, so I will have to do a side by side comparison to verify this conclusion.
Yesterday, a fellow photographer visited me to witness first hand the making of a wet-plate collodion photograph. I made a portrait of him in the same conditions as Rachel's image:
Marco. |
Two very very beautiful portraits! Love that small DOF and the softness. The light is magic in this plates.
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Love your blog.
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