Tags for Forum Posts: parr family photos
Didn't the clock tower look so much better when it wasn't part of a massive traffic island?
I like the one of dog on chair in August Bank Holiday 1903. Somehow you know it isn't Parr Senior who's boss in that house. Photos like Mysterious Stan were very popular at that time. Fairies in the garden and so on. It's a great collection. Thanks for sharing it with us, Hugh.
"Mysterious Stan" is, as I'm sure most people know, a double-exposure image. I may well just be showing my ignorance of the history of amateur photography, but I was surprised to see this technique being used in such an everyday matter so long ago.
Looks like a triple exposure Hugh. Very easy to do ( usually accidentally ) with the simple cameras of the time. Just don't wind on the film between exposures.
In 1900 Kodak introduced the 'Brownie' camera at a price of 5 shillings, it took six 2 1/4 x 2 1/4 pictures on roll film. Good contextual article here, written by Colin Harding, ex-National Media Museum chief.
Thanks Gordon. If Brownie photos were 1:1 ratio, the it doesn't look like these images were captured using a Brownie. They seem to be more like a 5:4.
I think the Brownie Mk 2, introduced a few years later, gave rectangular format pictures.
As others say multiple exposures were easy to do but there was little way of adjusting the exposure to match the picture so images became ghosts. The film stock looks like 120 5:4 to me. Roll film of 12 exposures per roll. This week i noticed that a can of 35mm x36 currently costs £12.99 - without dev and print! Isn't digital grand!
© 2024 Created by Hugh. Powered by
© Copyright Harringay Online Created by Hugh