It's very informal. There is no president, secretary, treasurer, no membership fees. I'm the founder, but I firmly believe in the Wikipedia principle. Members can publish their pictures, stories, and edit.
Gabriel Alwis is an old friend who was a jack-of-all-trades at Studio Times, Colombo. We used to print black and white together in his home darkroom. He has given me a lot of old camera accessories and photo gear which I treasure. Now retired, he is undergoing kidney dialysis. As he's still very keen about photography, I want to take him around and shoot pictures with him.
That's how I got the idea for this club. We both use retro equipment. I want to teach my children how to use old cameras and manual focus lenses. This will be a specialist skill in future, like driving very old cars with sliding mesh gear boxes. I've talked to a couple of other friends who were keen amateur photographers at one time, and hope they too, will join. My friend Mayadunne from Kandy is one and he's very interested.
All of us have to do this amongst various problems, including finding the time and money, in a country with raging inflation for the past five years and little public interest in this kind of thing. We have no axes to grind and none of us are famous photographers. Who cares? I'm already enjoying myself to the hilt, and look forward to our first outing to the Colombo zoo this Friday!
Many people don't know what to do with their old analog cameras -- use them! This club is mainly for that, but those with digital cameras can join, too. Hopefully, they will catch the retro bug at some point. This blog isn't commercial, and anyone who wants to use our pictures should get permission. This is a fun club and hopefully won't get too serious!
Monday, May 30, 2011
Night scenes during Buddhist Vesak festival
Taken during May 2011 Vesak festival. I hadn't done any serious photography (serious = roll film + hard work) for at least two years, and wanted to check my skills as well as quality of old film in the fridge. Taken with Fujuicolour Superia 1600 ASA negative film out of date by four years and 10 months, without colour correction filters. Prints done at commercial lab without any colour cast correction.
Camera Asahi Pentax Spotmatic SP1000 SLR with MIR 20mm lens at F 3.5 and F4 shutter speeds from 1/8 to 1/30th
Sunday, May 29, 2011
Street scene, rainy day, Colombo
One of my favourite photos. It was taken with a cheap, old zoom, which added to the picture's rain-created fuzziness. In the background, you can see the front of the Borella municipal supermarket building.
Asahi Pentax Spotmatic SP1000, nondescript 35-200 zoom lens, Fuji neopan 100, F 3.5 at 1/60
Asahi Pentax Spotmatic SP1000, nondescript 35-200 zoom lens, Fuji neopan 100, F 3.5 at 1/60
Shipwreck, Kinross
One of my oldest surviving photos. Only part of this wrecked ship can be seen now due to massive sea erosion along the coastline opposite Kinross Club, Wellawatte. The year was probably 1985, and the dark smudge on top is a burn mark made while printing.
Camera has to be a Canon, can't remember other details.
Camera has to be a Canon, can't remember other details.
Macro -- red ants
This was taken with a Canon FTb SLR using a Fujinon F 3.5 macro with M42 thread on Fujicolour 400ASA negative film. I think the magnification was about 2X.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
About myself
I am a writer and photographer. I started doing both around the same time, in the early eighties. I tried to make a living from photography (not successful) and worked briefly as a photojournalist. Since 1996, I've made a living as a journalist. In addition, I have written several novels. Around that time, I began my own documentary photography project, photographing the changing face of Colombo and ways of life. After being inactive for the past five years, I'm back to photography again now in 2011.
Since many Sri Lankans discard their old analog cameras, this is an attempt to change that trend. Hence the title, Retroheliographers. But things have changed. I began using compact digital cameras (such as an early Canon 3.8 megapixel camera Sony Cybershot) but my mainstay was still an SLR. After my colour film processing lab closed down years ago, I bought an old Nikon D90 and got serious about digital photography. I now have a Canon 5D MarkIII and Canon 600D.
Since many Sri Lankans discard their old analog cameras, this is an attempt to change that trend. Hence the title, Retroheliographers. But things have changed. I began using compact digital cameras (such as an early Canon 3.8 megapixel camera Sony Cybershot) but my mainstay was still an SLR. After my colour film processing lab closed down years ago, I bought an old Nikon D90 and got serious about digital photography. I now have a Canon 5D MarkIII and Canon 600D.
I'd like to resume film photography as an art form, but circumstances don't allow this right now. But I'm keeping my Canon FTb and Asahi Pentax Spotmatic SLRs and Fed 5b rangerfinder in working order, and will get back to it when things are right.
It's a pleasure to be using old manual lenses with the two DSLRs!
It's hard to explain why I stuck with photography amidst so many difficulties. I have also accumulated a body of photographic work that looks better with age. Places change, people change, you need to record these changes. This is what I love doing. I'm into my fourth decade in photography, and I believe I have at least two more to go!
Stay with me.
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