Three (Unexpected) Uses For A Digital Camera
A New Tool For Some Old Tricks Page 2

A Proofing Back
You can see what is coming. Instead of putting the NPC Nikon on the back of the lens, I can now use the D70 instead. The LCD screen doesn't tell you as much as a Polaroid, and it's ISO 200 instead of ISO 100 so you have to remember to open up and close down one stop, but in return for the savings on Polaroid film I'll put up with this most of the time--though not all of the time because Polaroids still tell me more.

The idea of the D70 as a proofing back led quickly to the idea for the second use. I can put this camera on the back of any setup where I need a proofing camera, including a bellows. Light bulb comes on overhead.

There's something old-fashioned and romantic about bicycles, and shooting with the Dreamagon disguises the fact that it is actually a modern off-road bicycle. The bit of stovepipe behind the front wheel (we're installing a wood-burner in the kitchen) adds to the old-fashioned ambience.

Slide Copying
Years ago slide copying was an essential tool in many professionals' lives, but today, scanning has almost completely replaced slide duping. A top-quality 3000dpi scan allows a full-page repro at 300dpi and indeed it is just about adequate for a double-page spread.

The trouble comes when you don't want top-quality scans: you want pics for the web. Sure, you can still scan, but it's extremely time-consuming.

Enter the D70 again. Dig out the old slide-copying setup; install the D70; set the image size and quality as low as it will go; and you can crank out web-quality shots as fast as you can change the slides and press the button, though Nikon's failure to offer a proper cable release socket on the D70 is a major black mark against them. Of course, they aren't the only ones. When I started in photography, the vast majority of cameras accepted the standard taper-tip cable release, and those that didn't (old Leicas and Nikon Fs) required a simple, low-cost adapter. Now you need a different, expensive, electronic release for each camera you own--a situation which appalls me.

But to return to the slide copying, as long as you arrange your slides in batches, you can cheerfully duplicate all formats as needed: 35mm, roll film, 4x5", though that's as big as my slide-duper goes. Look out for a major expansion of www.rogerandfrances.com!

I wanted to concentrate on the "sun" rather than the "flower," and I think this Dreamagon shot succeeds in capturing the blinding summer light.

Soft Focus
At the beginning of the article I said that I much prefer the look that I get with silver halide to the look that I get with digital. Whether silver is superior or not is a matter of opinion, but there's no doubt that the two are different: it's like the difference between oil paints and acrylics.

Anyway, one of the reasons I use the cameras and lenses that I do (Alpa, Leica, Linhof, Nikon, Rodenstock, Schneider, Voigtländer, Zeiss) is to me there's a biting sharpness, a crispness to film that I don't see in digital (or with most zooms on silver, for that matter). But then it occurred to me: with soft-focus lenses, pretty much by definition, there's no biting sharpness, so digital is fine.

What is more, it helps solve some of the difficulties of soft focus on 35mm. The smaller the format, the harder it is to judge the effect of the soft focus. The more over-the-top the soft focus, the greater the flare, so the harder it is to determine exposure. And the greater the flare, the bigger the risk of grievous desaturation, even with the highly saturated Kodak EBX that is currently my favorite film.

My Dreamagon (www.dreamagon.com) is capable of very extreme effects, so I often need to bracket both exposure and soft focus: in other words, three exposures at each of two apertures (aperture controls the degree of soft focus). This brings me down to a mere six images on a 36-exposure roll, which starts getting quite expensive.

Enter the D70. I don't even need raw: JPEG is fine, so with even a 256MB card I can bracket mercilessly if I need to--the rear screen is OK in the studio, but like everyone else's, it is of limited use in bright sun.

Soft focus still remains somewhat unpredictable, and I discard a few shots when I get home, but my hit rate goes up spectacularly, and the bill goes down equally spectacularly. What is more, I can now afford to try anything that takes my fancy, which in turn means that I learn to predict better what the Dreamagon will do, which in turn means that I can use it
more easily and with more conviction on film if I want to.

A further advantage is that I can play quite a lot of tricks in Adobe's Photoshop with color, brightness, contrast, and saturation, so my exposures don't need to be quite as accurate as they do on slide.

It's early days, and I still can't imagine forsaking silver halide for the majority of my creative photography, so there is no question of switching to digital; but as I say, the D70 is now firmly a part of my Nikon outfit, which is as it should be.

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