Andrew, how did you find out about this? Would have been brilliant to see!
Hi all
I attended the opening of the Collodion Spirit exhibition at the Gold Street Studios gallery in East Trentham today. As part of the festivities, they had arranged for photographer Craig Tuffin to come down from Queensland.
Craig has built a 24" x 32" plate camera into the back of a Ford Transit van
The camera uses a 900mm lens mounted on a fully articulated 'standard' with blackout material around it.
Inside is another 'standard' where Craig can mount the plate. The 'plate' in this case is a 24" x 32" piece of flat roofing iron that has been power-coated black on one side. The iron is then coated with collodion (cellulose dissolved in ether and alcohol and mixed with iodine salts). The plate is then made light sensitive by dunking it into a silver nitrate bath (black thing on left) to make the salts light sensitive. It takes 4mins in Vic temperatures to sensitise it properly.
One of the issues having the lens mounted on the back of the van is that doesn't come with a lens hood. Craig gets by with a little help from his friends.
The collodion has to be poured evenly over the plate. With a plate this size, it can be very tricky and a percentage of the success is luck dependent.
All set to shoot. It's not a quick process. When Craig posed his subject, the sun was out. By the time everything was ready to go, it was 30mins later and the sun had been replaced by light rain. The final exposure was 13secs at F11.
The developing of the plate has to be done in the dark but can be done under safe light as the treated collodion is only blue and UV sensitive. Craig has a converted food caravan set up as a full darkroom that follows the van around for this purpose.
Once the plate has been developed, the fixing can be done in daylight.
Here's what the resultant image looks like. The shot is a positive because the iron sheet is back so the metallic silver comes up white.
One happy photographer!
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Andrew, how did you find out about this? Would have been brilliant to see!
That looks like one of the cartographer's cameras that used to live in the old Lands Dept. in George Street?
URSUSMAJOR
Nearly as big as this one.
File:The giant camera.jpg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What is just as fascinating as the size of the camera is the old process he is using to produce the image.
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
I came across tintyping on a youtube video and instantly was hooked. It's just so opposite to digital.![]()
After a bit of googling, I came across the Gold Street Studios website offering courses on all these old processes. I signed up for the tintype course and while talking to the lady who runs it, Ellie Young, she advised me they were opening a new exhibition 'Collodion Spirit' and had Craig coming down from QLD with his camera/van to make some big plates. So I dragged the rest of the family away from their computer screens and went for the Sunday drive.
Craig Tuffin's website can be found here, and his Flickr stream is here.
Ah! My Ma lives in Trentham and we're both shutterbugs. I told her about your pics and she knows Ellie Young. She didn't seem to understand why I didn't understand that she didn't tell me!![]()
Excellent piece. Thanks for that, most interesting.
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