Time
was when the technology we have today was unheard of and photographers
working with their cameras and in their darkrooms were considered
genuises. And to be sure, their work did have a certain allure,
especially as the heart of it had to be conducted in a dark room.
I
remember very well my first few visits to the darkroom my uncle used to
have set up in his house. It was in the attic, so even getting to it
was a bit of an adventure for small bairn like me; climbing all those
sets of stairs till you eventually reached the attic had my little legs
beat!
Of course, as is always the case, the first thing that got
my attention was the smell, a weird mixture of chemicals and damp
mustiness in the small space under the roof.
I can safely say that
was the time when something clicked in my mind telling me that this was
the best hobby I would ever see in my life, and from that time on, I
was smitten by the photography bug, something that still has not gone
away even now, after more than 40 or so years. Every time I enter my own
darkroom nowadays, and the moment I smell the chemicals I use for my
own processing, I am magically and instantly transported away to that
tiny attic my uncle used to have.
And that was also the time when I
learned the beauty of black and white film. Besides all the other films
around at that time, my uncle had suggested, with a tell-tale glint in
his eye, that I try some Tri X
in my camera and see what I think about it. That of course told me
straight away that there is bound to be some mystique behing the film,
otherwise my uncle wouldn't have given me that mischievous look of his,
so I was determined to try it out.
Loading up my dad's old Agfa
Super Silette with a roll of Tri X, I walked out of the house and headed
on foot, all the way to Ealing Broadway in West London, which at that
time was a posh kind of place with stores like Bentalls, F H Rowse and
British Home Stores lining the main High Street. And of course that was
where one of my favourite toy shops used to be situated, just past the
National Westminster bank; the toy shop was called Confiserie Francaise,
and it had two huge beautifully curved glass windows outside, and a
doorway leading to an absolute Aladdin's cave full of all the toys you
can imagine! Needless to say, I used to spend virtually every weekend in
there, spending my few shillings pocket money on toys! Oh, those were
the days!
Anyway, so during my way to Ealing Broadway, I took as
many shots as I could, of buildings, people shopping etc, whatever I
thought interesting, and of course at that time nobody was paranoid
about someone taking photos, unlike today.
Very soon the film had
been used up and that very same day I took it to my uncle who told me
how to develop it and prepare the negatives for printing.
I can
tell you that soon as I saw my shots printed out, my eyeballs almost
fell out! I had never seen such beautiful photos, except in books of
course; sharp, crisp whites and deep, dark black shadows, with shades in
between; I was hooked!
So that was my first intorduction to Tri
X, a film taht is still going strong and should be the one film, if not
the only one, that every aspiring photographer, amateur or professional,
should never be without.
The film's history goes back at least 50
years. The speciality about Tri X is that it has a superb emulsion
coating that gives unbeatable contrast with incredible sharpness, with
only a slight hint of grain, making it ideal for moody shots.
Tri X
has a lot of harshness about it; so this is the one to choose for
portraits that convey the true feeling of a person's character, I find.
And
of course, unlike colour films, the images will not fade. I myself
prefer to have my most valubale shots, be they of people or places,
taken on this film and printed by hand on the very best black and white
paper I can afford, for I know that once done in this way, my shots will
still be around generations after I am gone from this world; I couldn't
say that about digital media, stored as it is on precarious hard
drives, prey to all sorts of problems such as power surges and obsolete
formats and magnetic storms and what not.
Tri X doesn't require as
much development time as other black and white films, like TMax for
example. Whihc of course means you can have your film developed, dried
and in your darkroom for printing in a very short time span.
Sure,
there is quite a bit of graininess present with this film, but that is
half the fun and beauty of using it. It somehow manages to infuse a
magical quality to your shots that you would swear were not observable
when you took the photos! With hand on heart, I can safely say that
digital black and white shots just do not, and for me, cannot have the
mystery and magic that shooting with this film gives.
And you know something? With Tri X,
you don't need to have a camera costing $$$$$$; load it up into any
good classic camera you have lying around at home, and you'll see what I
mean; the results will always be astounding.
So there you are! I
bet this has got your creative juices flowing at long last and you can't
wait to get your hands on some this weekend.
For me, I am just so
glad that I learned this superb art, which in my mind is so close to
that other ancient art of incantation and hocus-pocus, alchemy. And all
this at a time when darkrooms are fast being closed down.
Every
time I switch on that red lamp and those weird and strange smells
together with the tinkling sound of running water in my darkroom hit my
senses, I am in heaven, nay, paradise itself!
Why don't you join me?
:)
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