David A. Goldfarb
New member
I love this unique picture by David of his son taken several years back! It was orignally posted here and that's an interesting read, in itself!
Music represents a great amusement and can expand the horizons of kids from 18 months to early teenage years! Look to see if you have picture of young kids with an instrument. Even though they cannot perhaps play much, they certainly have awe for the instruments and folk that make music! What kid doesn't like to hum a tune, sing, shake a rattle or bang drums!
So go to it!
Asher
Melchi's Halloween portrait. He's just short of 23 months old in this photo.
This is a crop from 8x10", made with a 10"/f:4 Voigtländer Petzval lens at f:22 from around 1860 on a Sinar P on my favorite discontinued portrait film, Ektapan rated EI 50 and developed in ABC pyro. The print is on another discontinued product, Azo, Grade 2, developed in Ansco 130. I made five exposures for this shoot. I've got two lights here, one in a plain 5" reflector with barndoors pointed upward just in front of the camera, and another with a Norman cylindrical background diffuser with two barndoors on a boom over the organ. The main light is about two stops brighter than the background light.
There's just a little retouching here--some etching with an X-acto knife on the negative to tone down the leg a bit.
Music represents a great amusement and can expand the horizons of kids from 18 months to early teenage years! Look to see if you have picture of young kids with an instrument. Even though they cannot perhaps play much, they certainly have awe for the instruments and folk that make music! What kid doesn't like to hum a tune, sing, shake a rattle or bang drums!
So go to it!
Asher
Melchi's Halloween portrait. He's just short of 23 months old in this photo.
This is a crop from 8x10", made with a 10"/f:4 Voigtländer Petzval lens at f:22 from around 1860 on a Sinar P on my favorite discontinued portrait film, Ektapan rated EI 50 and developed in ABC pyro. The print is on another discontinued product, Azo, Grade 2, developed in Ansco 130. I made five exposures for this shoot. I've got two lights here, one in a plain 5" reflector with barndoors pointed upward just in front of the camera, and another with a Norman cylindrical background diffuser with two barndoors on a boom over the organ. The main light is about two stops brighter than the background light.
There's just a little retouching here--some etching with an X-acto knife on the negative to tone down the leg a bit.
Last edited by a moderator: