Friday 27 February 2009

parasol and hat

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pinhole parasol

2 comments:

Sean Halligan said...

shAw

What a great photograph!

On first viewing this certainly has the look of a pinhole photograph. It shows the circular vignetting effect, which demonstrates the limit of the dispersal of light as it enters the camera and falls on the focal plane. This would normally indicate that a pinhole camera of an extreme wide angle design (a very short focal length) has been used. However, the characteristics of this particular image appear to contradict that assumption. Not only does the focal length appear to be approximately normal, i.e. as the eye might have perceived the scene, but the woman with the parasol is remarkably distinct (sharp) showing no trace of any movement. I suggest that this would have been so difficult to achieve using the long exposures that would have been necessary and the slow photographic emulsions available in the late 19th century. In addition, the men in the background, who are sheltering from the sun, are in a somewhat 'softer focus'. This again is not a characteristic of pinhole, which presents everything, from close-up to infinity, as relatively sharp throughout.

All this does not detract from the image itself, which is very striking and is keeping me thinking about the poetic elegance of a handheld camera disguised as a parasol!

Sean Halligan said...

Having said all that (my previous comment) and on looking at it more carefully, I'm inclined to think that it might well be a pinhole photograph after all. Also, how could I have not noticed that the background figures are mostly women?...

Sean