The little Nikon EM and its Series E lens gets little love from many Nikon enthusiasts, but it has always performed well for me.
I'm currently using a composite of the above images as the desktop background on my old iMac.
The little Nikon EM and its Series E lens gets little love from many Nikon enthusiasts, but it has always performed well for me.
I'm currently using a composite of the above images as the desktop background on my old iMac.
The Yashica YE worked well, though the nice qualities of the images are due mostly to the Leica Elmar lens that I had mounted for this first test roll. It would be nice to find one of the Yashicor lenses that normally came on the YE, but they seem to be priced at about three times what I paid for the camera.
The Japanese camera industry made amazing progress in the 1950s as the country recovered from the devastating effects of WWII. Nikon lenses became an instant hit after David Douglas Duncan used them in Korea, and the Leica and Contax copies made by several companies demonstrated top-notch craftsmanship.
In the picture to the right the Yashica YE is in the middle, the German Leica IIIa is at the bottom, and the top camera is a Leotax Elite. The top two are very similar in construction and appearance and demonstrate the Japanese camera companies' effort to one-up the German orginal with the addition of thumb levers for film advance. While those levers enhanced functionality they also increased the camera sizes, and they introduced some construction complexity which make DIY repairs more challenging.
The Yashica YE actually started out being produced by Nicca as the Nicca 33, but that company was bought by Yashica which continued making the camera with very little changes. In spite of the good quality of these Leica rangefinder copies, however, they all soon disappeared from view, eclipsed by the appearance of the single lens reflex designs produced in both East and West.
![]() |
| Annie Leibovitz - selfie - 1970 |
All of the simple cameras with ruby windows allowing proper frame spacing for paper-backed medium format film including the Anscoflex II present a problem for users. Those ruby windows worked fine when a lot of those simple camera were new. However, in the intervening years film makers have quit making the numerals on the backing paper with enough contrast to show up well through the ruby windows. As a result it can be very difficult to see the framing numerals well enough to properly center the frame, and overlapping frames are a constant danger.
There is a simple solution to the dark window problem. You can just remove the ruby window, leaving a hole in the camera back through which the framing numerals are easily seen. The ruby coloring was really only an advantage long ago when films were less sensitive to red light. Letting through the full spectrum onto the backing paper these days is not a problem as long as the length of exposure is kept short. That can be ensured with a small strip of black tape covering the window except when the film is being advanced.I was pleased to get 12 perfectly spaced frames on this roll of Kentmere 400. With my simple cameras I most often use 100-speed film for proper sunny day exposure. In this instance with the faster film I flipped the lever to place the yellow filter over the lens when the subject was mostly in full sun, and flipped back to the uncovered lens for shaded subjects.
Another fine day for a leisurely stroll through Albuquerque's Old Town.
I recently had a total disaster with a bad batch of PMK Pyro developer, so this roll of Kentmere 100 was processed in some reliable old Rodinal 1:50.
Currently on exhibit at the Albuquerque Museum is the photographic work of Cara Romero and ceramics by her husband, Diego. She is an enrolled citizen of the Chemehuevi Indian Tribe. He is from the Cochiti Pueblo in New Mexico. The photographic images ranged from large posters to billboard-sized images. I have never been a fan of elaborately staged work, but I found the exhibition interesting for several reasons.
A video narrated by the photographer provided a good overview of style and techniques.
There are online videos which also illustrate the technical aspects of the work, including this shot from a PBS presentation which reveals the image making instrument to be a Canon digital camera.
My conclusion at this point is that even though there may be a lot of talk about contemporary photography, there seems to be no general agreement on exactly what that may be. High-tech digital imagery and directorial staging certainly are prominent, but how any of that relates to the history and practice of photography over the past two centuries is not at all clear.
It is perhaps not surprising that the statements made by the artist are not particularly helpful, as such self assessments and explanations seldom are. Romero relates that she was initially very enthusiastic about some of the early work by people like Curtis in portraying indigenous people. As she got more into developing her own ideas and style, however, Romero decided that there was not much done since the early days to bring forth an updated view of how indigenous people are encountering the world today. So she offers her current work as an effort to fill the perceived void.
The problem I see with that self assessment is that Romero seems to be working with a pretty narrow slice of indigenous experience. Most of her models seem to be young creatives living in Santa Fe; they and Romero are certainly interesting and often beautiful people, but the pictures resulting from their collaboration leave aside rather a lot of daily life of the greater community.
I think it relevant to note that elaborately staged photography is not a new idea. Perhaps due in part to the cumbersome equipment of the very early photographers and the hurdle of very long exposure times, staging images - often depicting biblical subjects - was a very prominent technique. Here, for instance, is a shot by Julia Margaret Cameron.
And, finally, it cannot be overlooked that staged images have been the backbone of advertising illustration without a letup since very early in photography's history.
In a recent online presentation to the New Mexico Film Photographers group Chip Greenberg presented convincing evidence that the role of photographers in producing the avalanche of staged image ads which we have all been accustomed to may be close to an end. What he did was produce an image using an AI image generator which was very close in appearance to an image he had made in his commercial photography studio years ago. That AI image - even after some refinement - probably took less than an hour to make, while the original image on film was the product of days of work.
Following Chip's lead and shamelessly borrowing Cara Romero's concept I picked an online AI image generator of many available with a quick Google search and made the following image in under five minutes. It won't end up in any museum exhibits, but I think it should generate some soul searching by curators and critics. (More about this subject on my other blog.)