black and white photography by rob gardiner.

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Slow walk to Silvertown, shooting Pinhole Polaroid 55.

All images in this post are 4x5 using a pinhole camera (no lens, just a pinprick sized hole in a shoebox sized container).

slow_city.jpg

Polaroid Type 55 P/N (Positive/Negative) produces both a negative (rated about 40iso) and a positive print (speed rated about 80iso). It is great stuff, but at between $2 and $5 a shot, depending where you buy it, it can be prohibitively expensive. So the best bet is often to get a job lot of outdated film, reducing the cost to under $1/shot. Outdated film works just fine, for the most part, and you quickly learn to be highly suspicious of manufacturers claims of expiry. But occassionally, things do go funky. All today’s shots were done with film that expired 7 years ago. Above, in the ‘Slow’ shot, you can see the Type 55 negative has decided it would start to solarize on the bottom areas (solarization is the term used to indicate reversal of tones, theoretically blacks turn to whites, whites to blacks, in reality varying shades of gray).

The shot below is of the Thames Barrier in London. First the scanned negative, followed by a straight flatbed scan of the positive. This unpredictability is part of the appeal, and I feel it fits with the concept of pinhole photography.

thames_barrier_1_n.jpg

thames_barrier_1_p.jpg

The Thames Barrier is a movable dam, it was designed to raise up and block high-tides that may threaten London. In the 1980s it had to be raised about 1-2 times per year. It now has to be raised 10-20 times per year, mostly due to those chemicals our factories like to belch out. They are contemplating building a second barrier as this one will not do the job well enough in 20 years time.

Silvertown is not the prettiest part of London. Mostly industrial estates belching all manner of chemicals into the air, it sits in the Docklands between London City Airport and the Thames. Below, the fantastically named Standard Industrial Estate on Factory Rd.
standard_industrial.jpg

thames_barrier_2.jpg

Jan 30, 2005 Comments Off
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My Tree in Central Park

my_trees.jpg

Smack bang in the middle of Central Park, on the Great Lawn. I’ve
been photographing this guy for years, and the day after Xmas I was
back there snapping him in all his glory. As you can see, he is a slow
but sturdy specimen. No actual snow falling, you can see his
neighbourly buildings on 5th Avenue. I’m a little older these days, so
I did not climb over the wire fence, resulting in the slightly wider
view. It makes me think about the 2020s, 2030s, what will he look like
then? I hope to keep you all informed.

my_tree3.jpg

Here he is in 2002 (not 2003 after all!) and 2001.

Jan 25, 2005 Comments Off
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Gallery of freaks, American Girl

gallery_freaks.jpg

american_girl.jpg
Gallery, 3 lights. American Girl. Canon, Capture the Memories.

I shot in NYC long enough that when I went there for a few days
I knew that there was little use trying to get some great street shots
in such a short time. These were from the roll that I did shoot, around
Times Square.

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NYC Through a Pinhole, Part I

Back in New York City for a few days between Christmas and New Years day, I shot a few photographs with a 6x6 pinhole camera.

pinhole_nyc_01.jpg

Double exposure.

pinhole_nyc_02.jpg

I lived in NYC for almost five years from 99-03, but this was
the first trip I’d made to the Statue of Liberty since 87. I plan to go
back in 2021.

pinhole_nyc_03.jpg

Astor Place

pinhole_nyc_04.jpg

New York Stock Exchange.

pinhole_nyc_05.jpg

pinhole_nyc_06.jpg

pinhole_nyc_07.jpg

More to come, perhaps, when I find time to develop some film.

Jan 10, 2005 Comments Off

All content copyright Rob Gardiner nyclondon.com 1999 - 2005