Thursday, June 27, 2024

Where have I been all these years?

I don't think there is a veteran reader left to read this and understand or care about my absence but I think I owe an explanation to the blog I created in my early university years. 

This blog dates back to 2009 starting with my experiments and classes in LCF. Looking back at my early posts I can see that I was terrible and knew nothing, to now that I can see that I have come long way but still there is much to learn. 

In 2018, my colleague and friend Carolina told me that there are some potential big name projects that we can shoulder together and turn them in to a continues client over time. Undertaking 3 to 6 shoots every month once we settle in and establish ourself. The task was simple enough that two people can undertake it without additional need of a team and if the environment was under control, only one Photographer could get the job done. Initially we didn't charge them too high since we were also starting this type of photography relatively new and we weren't thought this at school either, but we quickly learned adapted and developed a workflow and raised our price to what was agreeable to us and the clients. Over the years we did commercial shoots in Harrods, Selfridges, Heathrow Airpot Terminal 5, Manchester Exchange Square, The Trafford Center, Sloan Street, Regents Street and the Old Bond Street. During these years we had pandemic and even somehow managed to work during the pandemic, though the payments were so slow that we didn't get paid until the pandemic was over and the world was coming to normalisation period after Covid-19. We thought that our hard work, dedication, professionalism and adaptability would be rewarded. How wrong were we! After 4 years we learn that was not the case.

In May 2021 while cycling I got hit by a pickup truck. Which put me out of commission for about 12 weeks. You can see my journey after the crash in these Instagram posts: Post 1 & Post 2. I can't thank my best friends Jing and Linda enough for their help. Surviving bike crash involving a Ford pickup truck is one thing but that happening in Covid pandemic times in a Bank-holiday Sunday is next level inconvenience. 

Later in 2021 I was introduced to Andy, he needed someone to handle 4x5 large format negatives in the darkroom, more precisely process them in Deep Tanks via dip and dunk method, on occasion I'd do 35mm and medium formats but that was rare. Thanks to this connection I'd also get to play in C41 chemistry again and learn bit more about Black and White developers like their unique characteristics and even home brewing them, although my understanding of home brewing B&W developers started this year in 2024. 
In 2021-2022, due to COVID restrictions, factory shutdowns, workforce reductions, and the Evergreen Suez Canal incident, fresh photographic chemistry and professional Kodak colour film became scarce and expensive. Shooting unpaid work in colour negative film and processing it became a significantly larger expense than in 2017. Consequently, after 2021, I shifted my focus to post-production, processing, and digital shoots. I couldn't post about the processing work due to NDAs, and I didn't enjoy digital work, which diminished my interest in blogging.

In late March 2023, Andy disappeared, and by the end of 2023, I learned why. I will not reveal his personal information here, but his disappearance affected the one enjoyable work environment I had: processing negatives. This also halted my access to free processing, adding more costs to an already expensive analog shooting process.

The post-COVID years have been challenging for my family and me. Since mid-2023, life has been particularly difficult. Despite my efforts to mask my sadness and turmoil, my girlfriend Samantha noticed and, being a great communicator, helped me by listening and encouraging me to help myself.

Moving forward, I will dedicate more time and resources to analog photography. I have already recovered a backlog of negatives and photos that I have yet to publish on my blog and portfolio. Some photoshoots are moving into the pre-production phase. I hope these efforts will rebalance my work-life in a direction I enjoy. Fingers crossed, by 2026, I aim to pursue a master's degree in photography, thirteen years after graduating from UAL-LCF in Fashion Photography. I want to delve deeper into darkroom techniques and work in ways digital photographers cannot. Learning digital photography gets easier every day, while mastering analog and darkroom techniques is becoming increasingly challenging.

Monday, June 10, 2024

Pentax 67 II

Let's talk about the workhorse in the room. 

I got my first Pentax 6X7 in 2014 from Mr.Cad in London and after one month of using it I went back in the shop and told them "I want you to notify me immediately if you receive a Pentax 67 II" and left my phone number. 

Asahi Pentax 6x7 worked just fine but the problem I had with it was slowing me down a bit. 
The body lacked the grip in comparison to new version and the version I had didn't have meter. Although I use lightmeter in all my analog shoots, there are times that I would like to depend on cameras meter too when time is short. However I knew that any version of Pentax 67 was there to stay in my kit. So several months after I gave my phone number to Mr.Cad I got a phone from them telling me a body in Excellent condition was available there and I Just dropped everything I was doing and dashed there. I part exchanged my Existing camera with the new version and since that day it's been happy shooting for me. 




I knew the camera was not in unused condition and also it was not in Mint+ or Excellent +++ or some on top of a list of some other camera condition ration but it worked and it didn't look too bad and I knew this would be my go to field camera which is to stay. Wont be selling or part exchanging this camera. 

So since last 10 years, I have been using Mamiya RZ67 Pro II and Pentax 67II as my medium format film cameras. Studio and Field I am covered for 6x7 the ideal format.  
In the I'm not there shoot, I asked a friend of mine who also had a Pentax 67II to lend me his camera so I could shoot Colour with one then swap for Black & White with other camera. 

One thing I didn't know about Pentax 67II was that in Aperture priority mode, it has greater shutter speed control (which you can't control). What do I mean by that? The shutter speed on the dial goes up by a stop from 4 sec to 1/1000 sec, but the aperture priority mode would go half stops giving you just little bit more accurate exposure on some scenarios and to be honest I didn't know about this until I shot the Mechanic shoot. Though I  swapped to Nikon F6 in order to get better story from the shoot. 

What I like about Pentax 67 II? 
  • It is 6x7 medium format SLR camera
  • Unlike Mamiya RZ or RB 67 system, while focusing you wont need to adjust exposure depending on focusing distance. 
  • The body resembles modern-day SLR or DSLR
  • Backwards compatible lenses with older pentax 67 version. 
  • Same camera can shoot both 120 and 220 film (if 220 makes a comeback at all) 
  • The focusing prism is beautiful and easy to manual focus. 
  • Aperture priority mode has shutter speed half stops. 
  • Battery that lasts for years. 

Sunday, June 9, 2024

GoSee №1.3



 

Photographer: Bugra Ergil (me)
Model: Jemilla King self casted
Camera: Pentax 67II + SMC 105mm 2.4
Film Ilford HP5+ shot at box speed
Processed in Kodak HC110 (b)
Scanned with Epson Perfection V750 Pro

Saturday, June 8, 2024

Moyin - I'm not there.

Final image of the edit I done in last post. Gotta say I love Kodak Portra 800, favourite colour film, only downside is hard to find and more expensive than others. 

Camera: Pentax 67 II + Pentax SMC 105mm 2.4
Film: Kodak Portra 800 shot at Box speed
Processed in Kodak Flexicolour C-41
Scanned in Epson Perfection V750 Pro
Team: 
Photography: Bugra Ergil (me)
Styling: Lenita Visan
Makeup: Jess Sumer
Hair: Yumi Noh
Model: Moyin @First

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Adjusting RGB Levels on scanned negative film

 


I made blogpost about this back in 2013 and this is still my workflow when I'm shooting analog. This can be done with nearly all scanner soft wears that allow you to turn auto adjustments off. 

In a nutshell: While scanning negatives, the scanner software usually performs or attempts to perform this step for you. However, the software interprets the image in 1s and 0s, so the black or white out-of-frame areas can confuse the scanner software and result in inconsistent colours. This method simply adjusts the RGB levels on the histogram to the correct positions, removing software error from the equation.


Monday, June 3, 2024

Deep Earth By G.Binsky - NÂș.3

 

Photography Bugra E & Carolina M
Model: Anna W

Camera: Pentax 67 II + SMC 105mm 2.4
Film: Kodak Portra 400
Processed in Kodak Flexicolor C-41
Scanned with Epson Perfection V750