He takes his job very seriously.
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↑Leica M9 and Leica 75mm Summarit @ f/2.5.
I captured a few frames during this sequential climb, but this one – with the searching foot – ultimately prevailed.
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↑Leica M9 and Voigtländer Nokton 40mm @ f/1.4.
After studying this for a while, I realized why I preferred this image to the others.
The floating foot, adds a dynamic quality to the image. We know he’s climbing, but with the foot between rungs, his movement is emphasized and there is a (tiny) sense of drama: will he find his footing?
More than this, the same lower foot, though not connected to the rung, completes a rung-to-limb schematic echoed in the two rungs above, that ultimately converges and directs our attention to his face (see red arrows below):
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It’s interesting to tease these little visual cues out, though I’d much rather enjoy the images for what they are: precious, personal moments… frozen in time.
This was an accident. It happened when I was developing the film and now it’s flawed, wouldn’t you say?
This was literally the 37th frame of a “36” roll that I messed up as I was loading the film strip into the developing spool. It was consequently unevenly exposed to the solutions; the film tore as I was removing it from the tank.
But the scene, the mood – the intent – of this image is still conveyed… at least for me. I look at it and I’m taken there, to that quiet afternoon, even if I can’t remember all the details.
The image, like my memory, is incomplete.
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↑Leica M2 and Voigtländer Nokton 40mm @ f/1.4.
People often ask how the image 94 Years came to be. Simply put, it was an unplanned image that evolved quite naturally.
I was trying to photograph my 94-year-old grandmother, whom I’d been visiting and who was sitting on a couch near the window.
This was the scene:
I had always been interested in her hands, and the story they tell. I realized that in my “mind’s eye” it was the hands I was interested in here too, and their positioning as they cradled her head.
So, I decided to shift my position – the beautiful constraint of using fixed focal length lenses is that they force you to compose in different ways – and take the photo from above.
The “inspired” composition was arrived at accidentally when she shifted the way she was holding her head. In the interim, I had increased the shutter speed to avoid blowing out the highlights in the hair and on the hand nearest to the window. This created a surrounding darkness – a natural vignette – as the details in the dark clothing were masked:
I then cropped the image to, once again, emphasize her hands:
At this point, I had the composition I wanted and I knew that any subsequent post-processing was an opportunity to either enhance or ruin the image.
Following some selective contrast, levels, and progressive vignetting adjustments, I arrived at the final image:
In looking at this a few years later, I realize that I may have been a little heavy-handed with the post-processing. But, the image stands as the image was: 94 Years.
I hope this was of interest.
– Peter
He hangs on the verge of movement, contemplating the next step.
Photo taken at Union Station, Toronto.
(please click on the image to view)
↑Leica M9 and Leica 35 Summarit @ f/2.5.