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Wet plate camera – smallest in the world?

Could this be the world’s smallest wet plate camera? Well, if not, it’s still very cool.

This miniature wet plate camera takes 1/2″ square plate photos.

The article shows this beauty as well as a picture taken with it.

Click here for more wet plate collodion cameras and accessories… of the larger kind

Collodion Photography Supplies

I was crusing around www.apug.org and found a link to a supplier of collodion supplies. I’ve been interested in this for some time, but have never taken the plunge.

http://lundphotographics.com/ seems to have a good range of supplies. Be sure to heed that safety warning since some of this stuff can kill you.

Click here for other large format and plate camera supplies at a discount.

Photography Site of the Day – The Light Farm

Though some think of those of us who are committed to film photography as anachronistic, film offers experiences that digital still can’t offer or can’t without much manipulation.

That’s not just snobbery, that’s the way it is. It’s a different medium.

While we’re all happy that film is still available, we have been losing emulsions and film sizes. That seems to be inevitable with the thirst for the quick fix that a digital camera offers.

With that said, that’s been the way it has been in photography since the beginning. Some processes replace others. We’ve had several different ways of making film and paper emulsions over the years. Some dedicated people keep the older processes alive after the general population moves on.

That’s where The Light Farm comes in. It’s tag line is: A Cooperative of Photographers – Artists, Scientists, Historians – Dedicated to the Renaissance of Handcrafted Silver Gelatin Emulsions

Just picking through some of the topics that are covered on the site are:

Paper and Coating
Digital Negatives
Kitchen Lab Emulsions
Contact Printing Paper
Printing Out Paper
Toning and Color Control
Silvergum Printing
Glass Negatives
Dry Plate Photography
Artisan Film Negatives
Odds & Ends
Literature List
Unpatented Pending
Historical Films
Galleries

For many people, currently available digital or film technology are satisfying enough.

Many others follow the quest to have total control, to have a distinct feel, to recreate the past, to preserve history, or to keep analog processes alive in a dwindling marketplace.

Lest you think this is totally impractical and that digital processes are totally eschewed, or at least incompatible with analog content, here’s an article that gives a nod to how computers and older processes can work well together. Silvergum Printing

Please excuse me, I have some more reading to do.