Film photography before Photoshop | Photoshop 25th Anniversary
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LinkedIn Learning is the next generation of Lynda.com. Grow your skills by exploring more Photoshop courses today: www.linkedin.com/learning/top...
#Photoshop
#HowTo
#LinkedIn
Пікірлер: 181
I'm 17 and have a darkroom in my bedroom. Analog forever changed the way I shoot. I barely touch my DSLR any more. And I'm looking forward to getting a color setup very soon.
@andrewford80
9 жыл бұрын
Keep at it. Analogue is so much more satisfying and as you have probably noticed, makes you consider your image making so much more.
@Gabriel-kb1ju
5 жыл бұрын
And now you are 20 and me 17. Waiting for the next one in 3 years telling me the same thing ha ha :)
@markb.8460
5 жыл бұрын
have u got insta with your photos?
@dadautube
5 жыл бұрын
atta boy! remember though: digital is ALSO good, VERY good, in its own rights! and the combination of both film (chemical) photography plus digital together makes (near-)perfect imagery possible! (~ film photographer since the mid-1960s speaking here!) :-) here's my motto in this regard based on extensive experience in both fields: Shoot film, scan your negatives (or slides) and then edit in digital; finally, print on chemical-based photographic paper for best possible results!
@DarkAngelEU
4 жыл бұрын
@@dadautube I'm getting into this process too, except I still need to figure out the steps from reversing a digital image back to an analog. The options I found (negative printer eg) are very expensive tho. Atm I wanna experiment with transparencies that could be used for the chemical print. Any suggestions?
I too rarely use my DSLR anymore. I have bought a lot film equipment such as enlargers and cameras that people thought they didn't need anymore for real cheap. It's very satisfying to develop and print my own photographs.
I love this... For years when teaching PhotoShop I would stop when we got to the dodge and burn tools and ask if anyone knew why they were represented by the "O" shaped hand and a "lollypop". Usually only one of two would actually know. We'd then reflect on how computer UIs are rapidly outgrowing the real world metaphors they were originally based on.
Thank you Lynda.com for including analog photography in your library of great videos/workshops.
Thanks for bringing back old memories. When I was a kid, my grandfather had a darkroom and he used to show me the techniques. technology has made the process easier, but it has killed the craftsmanship and charm. Today Photoshop can create thousands of effects in no time, but it will never be able to provide the joy of developing the image by hand.
That brought back happy memories of time spent in RAF Camera Club darkrooms in the 1950s - dodging with a bit of cotton wool on the end of a wire, burning with hands moving all the time - excellent video.
My first 'real' camera was a nearly new Zorki 4 in 1978 when I was 18 years old given to me by a work mate. I'm 58 now and although I have a digital camera, I still love film photography more. I did a college course (A-Level Photography) here in the UK and enjoyed the film and dark-room much more than the digital side. One other amusing thing to remember - if there's a long-term electrical power outage, film photographers will rise again...Lol.... Joking apart Konrad, great tutorial. Thanks for posting.
Film photoghaphy is a poem!!!
I have set up my darkroom finally., Having started shooting film back in the late nineties and not being forced to go digital, and sell all my film kit. I stuck with analogue. I knew film photography would not die out! even my sons are shooting b/w and enjoying seeing their photos being printed in the Darkroom , Best Jonathan
Darkroom printing still holds my imagination, though I haven’t done any in years. 2019 will be the year. Konrad, I’m in Norman, too. Would love to buy you a cup of coffee and hear your stories.
Thanks, Konrad. Took me back a few years! Really good job on demo-ing the analogue origins of various common tools in Photoshop.
That gradient burn is insane!
oh nostagies times!!!! analogic photography!!!!. so many remembering moments. so many amazing oportunities to burn in our hart. whats a lot of changes, and whats a lot of similarities. nostalgie and love for this beatiful woman, "the photography". thanks man for this vídeo.
YES! More love for analog photography! Film Love Lives On - analog photography is beautiful.
I love film, used it for 30years..still do.
Wonderfully explained ,narrated and shot ...
As someone who started on digital and shoots a lot of film, but cant self-develop, this was amazing to watch. Equating what you're doing (foreign to me) to its photoshop equivalent (familiar) really breaks it down and makes it seem so fun and interesting. You've definitely reaffirmed my dream to build a darkroom!
Awesome to see the the old techniques compared with how they were made digital in Photoshop. Although I love Photoshop, your traditional methods produced rich and beautiful results. Thank you!
You do have a sharpening tool in the darkroom, though. The term "unsharp mask" itself is actually a throwback to when people would use an out of focus of photographic positive in a process to increase accutance in the final image. The unsharp mask was an actual physical object. (Obviously, you should always get exact focus anyway, but still.)
Thank you for this clip, absolutely fascinating and informative.
Konrad - what a terrific explanation of dodging & burning. Great tutorial. Thanks.
thanks for this. I used to have my own darkroom and loved printing. this brings back a lot of fond memories. I was discussing this very subject with a friend earlier so I sent him a link to the video.
Really enjoyed this. Takes me back to the mid sixties when i had High School Photography classes!
Oh man this brings back the memories. My dad worked in a photo darkroom for around 10 years, and I remember watching him work a few times. I didn't really understand how it all worked back then, but it's really cool to revisit it :) I essentially grew up with Photoshop, from version 2 to CC nowadays.
@nasimahmed2894
4 жыл бұрын
Danny Zabolotny
If you haven’t tried film photography, you should! It’s fun and not that difficult just pricey.
True art of photography!
Божественный видос, за 9 минут вся история обработки
can't help but watch this with a smile on my face. this was really interesting.
Precious. Thanks for sharing!
Analog has texture and soul digital will never reach
@werwar27
3 жыл бұрын
you can perfectly recreate analogs imperfections in digital, and also do more. you got it backwards, if you think rationally about it instead of sentimentally
I was a custom color and B+W printer in the film days. I am just now learning Photoshop. This actually helps me to understand Photoshop! Thanks.
I worked in a custom photo-lab (color and B&W printing) for over 15 years and then switched to Photoshop. I miss it now.
I started out in photography just 8 months ago, with a film SLR and i thought i would learn with it and then get a DSLR, but i've realised i don't want a DSLR anymore... film i just so much more satisfying and authentic.
Spraying and praying with shots is part of the Macro process a lot of the time, hoping you nailed that paper thin focus on a spiders eyes, but there is definitely something we lost since the old limitations of shots. If there's ever a video that made me want to try limiting how many photos I take on an outing, this would be it. This was a great video.
wow! I've never knew about all this process ... my respect
WOW!! This was superb!! Thank you so much for this video. Makes me understand Photoshop a bit better.
Oh, to the memories! Trapped in a VERY dark room, lit by a very dim red light, no one to talk to. The radio was nice. I remember dodging and burning with a mask and then the retouching paints! From light gray to greenish-gray to deep black and everything in between, and only to be used on low ISO film. (Unless you used a tiny, tiny sponge to match the grain that you wanted.) Everything in Photoshop, especially 25 years ago, was based on these tools. Lately, those born to late to remember don't know where the terms came from. They should do some darkroom work. Just to know what the early photographers had to do. Yeah, it was magical. But after 35 prints of one negative to get exactly what you needed and wanted, all praise digital image editing!!! 🤗 But seriously, that one special print you'd get to tell a story in light and shadow was worth it. It was indeed magical. Would I try it again? Maybe once. Just to compare.
I do b&w darkroom printing, including plenty of dodging an burning, but I've always wondered what the old "airbrushing" technique looks like.
More in the darkroom please this was awesome. Could not care less about Photoshop though. This man knows his stuff and I am starting in the darkroom again so I sure appreciate his sharing this knowledge.
@joeking4389
8 жыл бұрын
I prefer the darkroom, myself.
@usanineoneone
7 жыл бұрын
Same here. I've being using Photoshop for 25 years, or at least it feels like 25 years. Set up a darkroom last year after 20 year absence, just love it.
@rpavich
7 жыл бұрын
He's got a whole video series about darkroom printing on Lynda.com. Just look for Konrad Eek.
@harrystevens3885
7 жыл бұрын
I fully agree Mr Breedlove...:)
I remember all the great hours spent in the darkroom under red light back in high school. I would to be able to get into a darkroom and process/print b&w again!
Amazing. Thanks for showing this.
amazing to see these techniques in practice
Wow beautiful craftsmanship
This is beautiful and inspiring!
that's amazing work right there!
This was amazing. More of this would be great. Either way going to look into a class to do this myself
How much nostalgia!
i love that you were able to film the video in the darkroom
@EDHBlvd
8 жыл бұрын
Yes, incredible.
@Louisi9
8 жыл бұрын
+mashersmasher It's a darkroom but he had the safe light on during the video. Its safe to print with the safe light but not to develop film.
@Igaluit
8 жыл бұрын
+Louis Hartley it's safe to develop. Helps to put print face down for half the time.
@Louisi9
8 жыл бұрын
Igaluit I said film not the print.
@Igaluit
8 жыл бұрын
Oh yes of course. I'll ask for my money back for that speed reading course.
this video bring so much memories.
This was such a wonderful explanation of the process and how it translates to Photoshop. I'm also very happy that this wasn't a petty PS is better or film is better argument but instead championed the value of both.
Yessssss!! you are soooooo unless cool.man!!!! That is, what I mean with my photography!! Analog ist the only real reason!! Thank you sooo much!!!
Great video, and so well demonstrated and explained.
Hi, Arrived there by chance...amazing. Thank you to share this. Regards
Really great video. I saw a photo of Ansel Adams doing similar tricks and was always very interested in these techniques.
incredible work, took time and afford. !
Love seeing those finished fiber prints in plastic white print trays! When a house catches on fire, people go back in to save their family photographic prints and negatives collections made from traditional processes.
Wooow thank you for share 😍😍😍😍🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
This is awesome. Wish I had the same talent.
You are good and I wish you were in Atlanta, GA because I would learn from you. Thanks for sharing;
This was great fun to watch it all again. I spent 20 years doing newspaper sports photography, pushing processing film and eventually into color. My color major was photo illustration and had a good background in high school and college with darkroom work. I often made 11 x14" double weight, archival photos. I too miss the old days and the chemistry that was available. It is a shame that most photographers ( I like to call them shooters as they can take a zillion photos and then edit) never will experience the joys of working in a darkroom and with real film. Thanks for sharing.
Fantastic video!
Don't know about photoshop but you gave me some good advice for my desire to improve my prints in the analog darkroom ......More please.:)
Wow. Really great idea to present this concept. Brings a lot of things into perspective when using Photoshop.
No idea how i ended up here but wow so glad i did. This was amazing
Ansel Adams was a master at doing these things.
Excellent video - very well explained!
Very cool, thanks for sharing. Konrad seems like a great guy.
I'd love more of his edits and pictures.
This is a great video, thanks a lot for sharing your knowledge...
Top video!
So cool! Thanks for the explanation and great video :)
Fantastic.
It's a magic!
Great video!
Thank you for this.
great one !! know where you came from 'photoshoppers' LOL .. then again ... after developing both images you can scan them and pick portions of each you liked best... and merge them in PS.. :-D .. thanks for the tutorial.. the magic of the darkroom is something very unique indeed ! :-D
Thanks for sharing these. I will be trying them out in my darkroom.
One Kodak two Kodak, but uses Ilford. One Ilford, two Ilford. Good Video. Thank you!
this is beautiful.
Thank you Mr. Eek!
Thank you for sharing!
That sounds stupid but i always wondered why the icons for Dodge and Burn look like this. Now i know it, thanks :)
Great!
"Oh yeah, so you just press the button, right?"
this is an amazing video
I developed film in a darkroom. When I was a kid, I was going to make a darkroom in a storage closet in my basement. I like film and digital. You know Ansel Adams? But do you know Arbrie Bodine? He was a photographer for the Baltimore Sun news paper. My girlfriend bought me a book of his photos. Beautiful black and white photos. I like color as well.
Amazing
Unsharp Masking was also a darkroom technique long before photoshop.
Thanks for Konrad Eek sharing
Awesome
Happy 25 Anniversary
I would pay good money to have someone teach me how to do this day by day....
Nice!
😍😍😍
This is great, thank you. Could you make another video making colour prints?
But what lighting was used in for his darkroom setup? What gear was used to produce this video in the darkroom, when its suppose to be dark, is what i want to know!?
If you're dodging you got the exposure wrong. Dodge only as a last resort, control the light - understand the light and how your film reacts to the light. Then make the appropriate choices with your chemicals and how you use them and the length of time you use them for as well as your ratios of developer v water.
I so miss developing and printing my own b&w stuff.😢
I did take photgraphy in high school, so this is all familiar to me!