Category: Uni Ramblings

  • Back to Basics: B/W Film and THE DK room

    In my first entry as a student, here, I mentioned that I will be using a manual camera and process my film into photographs.

    Well, I did just that and I have to say, for a novice, I did good. My photographs, although mediocre, did come out the way I expected.

    What I keep noticing, as a creative person, you tend to be your worst own critic. Always trying to be perfect and come up with a better image than before. Until another creative person comes along and says they ‘LOVE’ your work and it’s perfect the way it is. Yet, you still find time to criticise it even more before concluding that it ‘may’ does actually work as it is.

    Having said that, I actually resigned to the fact that, once it has been developed, stopped and fixed and there is nothing more I can do about my first (solo processed) film photographs other than frame them.

    So……my first ever EXPOSURES were on Resin Coated paper……

    Contact Sheet – Images from a 400ISO 35mm B/W film

    Trial and error plus excitement was the order of the day when I used up this film. I actually enjoyed taking pictures and to work on them in the dark room and to see the results was…… THERAPEUTIC!

    Northwick Park Hospital Tower

    The image of the hospital tower was taken from the Uni grounds as I walked home from first day of lectures.

    Good Morning!

    The bathroom photograph was a difficult one to produce as it was a very dark negative and to get the exposure time just right to see some of the detail was hit and miss. In the end, I settle for this image, only to discover that the film was damaged (see white scuff mark on the left of print).

    I went on to process further images from the same contact sheet on Fiber Based paper and the process although slightly different were much more better than I expected.

    Now, I can safely say that I can start on my project for this semester.

    EK13 Recommends: ‘Rear Window’ directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Brilliant piece of photography related film.

     

     

  • Photography Theory

    If there is one thing I hated in primary and high school, it was the writing of compositions and inshas (essays in swahili).

    Now that I had this bright idea of going to University to study photography in all its glory, the assignment that I am dreading the most is the essays we have to write. Already I have two 1500 – 2000 word essays due in around 5 weeks. So help me God that I meet the deadline or I am toast.

    The only positive I can take from all this is the fact we have been advised to use “The Basics of Essay Writing” by Nigel Warburton, to guide us on how to write essays with ease. As tiny as this book is, it has a lot of information with regards on how to structure your essay and reference your work with any research material you may include in your writing.

    I would recommend this book to all academics especially from high school onwards. I wonder if I had such kind of information, if my compositions and inshas in high school would have faired any better. I guess we will never know.

    Photography theory is intense. Now I know why all those text rich photography books are always heavy and it has nothing to do with them being hard backs.

  • Studying Photography

    Well, since my last post, I have been busy with making major changes with regards to me being a ‘photographer’. I have decided to go back to school or rather, learn much more than I have taught myself up until now.

    This has been a decision that has been weighing in my conscience for more than two years and after having my son, I am now ready to embark on this journey. So, for the next four years, I will be hitting the books both theoretically and practically as I learn the art of photography.

    As I write this post, I have enrolled as a first year student for a Photography Degree course and already attended my first lecture.

    Already my head is bursting with the sheer amount of information being provided. Learning new things even before I know the layout of campus like the back of my hand.


    Already….some ESSENTIAL reading going on.

    What I love about this course is that I can study part time and still continue to work. Not many courses around London have that flexibility. It would have meant signing up for a full time course and quitting my job and that isn’t an option at the moment. On the other hand, most photography courses specialise in specific subject matters like fashion, photojournalism, commercial, etc. Whereas this one touches on all that and much more. This suited me as I am still undecided on what kind of photography I want to specialise in.

    The fact that we have theory lectures on photography is already teaching me that I have alot to learn about the craft. It’s not all about just taking pictures, but why we take them and how they are interpreted. In my first lecture on Photography and Visual Culture, we looked at a documentary “Fatal Exposure” about a famous fashion photographer, Davide Sorrenti, who died at the tender age of 20 due to pre-existing form of hereditary anaemia and a heroine overdose. What struck me was his talent, how his photography was interpreted around the circumstances surrounding his death. This was a photographer who prompted a comment from a head of state to stop publicising his ‘heroin chic’ images as glamourous. Davide took photographs of mostly his closest friends and his girlfriend who at the time unfortunately took drugs. This documentary on it’s own just highlighted alot of details on photography and how they can be used as powerful tools.

    Later on the day for my practical module, it was some sort of introduction to manual cameras and dark room techniques which we will have to master throughout the course. So, I was re-introduced to 35mm B/W film and a VERY manual SLR. We got to learn the basics of photography…… aperture, shutter speed, ISO, etc. How to load a film onto a camera, which I discovered I had completely forgotten and how to re-learn to take pictures without knowing how they have turned out. Back to basics kind of stuff, which I am looking forward to. Now, to just go out there and snap away…..albeit carefully as you are limited to the famous 36 frames in this instance. Once all my film is used up, I get to learn how to develop my own film *fist pump* in my next class. Perhaps, I will be able to share some of them.

    I won’t bore you with my once a week experience about attending university and what I learn. I just wanted to celebrate/share a little of what the next four years will be like on a weekly basis. I know it will not be easy at times, especially when I have a 2k word essay to write and deadlines to meet. Even before I made my decision to go to Uni, I was already getting questions as to why now.

    I want to do this to get the knowledge that I won’t get anywhere else, if I want to be professional about it. I want the education to sustain me and to keep my creative juices flowing. Be able to talk about photography and engage in discussions about my work and that of others with a different approach than before. I am also doing this for my sanity really. It is something I have always wanted to do and it’s one of those decisions in life, that if you don’t do it you will regret for the rest of your life. So I said to myself, that I will do it and even if I fail I can at least hold my head up high and say that I tried, but having said that, my aim is to succeed.

    I will leave you with this TED video my tutor mention in class on photographing light. In essence, photography is the art of capturing light onto a light sensitive material, but I am sure this clip will leave you amazed at how ideas evolve and are improved with time. Enjoy.

    So……here is the next four or so years…….!

    I dedicate this post to Thandiwe and Mutua. Some how, it takes other peoples talent to motivate and inspire. I am humbled.

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