Thursday, November 22, 2012

Winter Hockey - Game 11

The Renegades are on a roll....  Another late hockey game on Tuesday evening, and yet another victory.  We faced off for a rematch with the Buzzards.  This time the game was at Callingwood Arena.  Usually the ice here is pretty rutted and chipped as there is a figure skating club that practices here all the time.  This time around is wasn't as bad as usual.  The Buzzards are an older team and this time around didn't get very many of their guys out to the rink.  Probably the fact that is was a late weekday game on a cold night.  They only had 10 or 11 skaters.  We had a full bench and outshot and outscored them badly.  The final score was 11-2 for the Renegades.  This helps to strenghten our hold on first place in our division.  The league may even consider moving us up one division, we'll have to wait and see what happens.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Print Session

Last Friday evening I worked on printing a couple of my negatives.  Arda and Tanja from the Monochrome Guild came over to watch me print, and learn my split filter printing technique.  This technique involves giving fiber-based multigrade paper at least two exposures, one filtered for high contrast, and the second filtered for the mid-tones.  The exposure times of the two exposures are adjusted to achieve the desired overall contrast.  Then selective burning and dodging is undertaken, to specific areas of the print, to adjust local contrast and exposure.  It sounds a lot more complicated than it really is, which was the reason that the two of them wanted to see it done first hand.  Hopefully I was able to demonstrate the technique successfully and they left having learned something.  After they went home, I worked on second negative... well into the morning hours.
On Saturday the prints sat in a holding tray of water while we celebrated my mothers birthday.  My parents, by two brothers with their families, and my girls all enjoyed a family dinner together.
The next day I returned to the darkroom to finish fixing, clearing, toning and washing these prints.  Here they are being toned in a tray of selenium....



Movember

My girls have been commenting to me in recent months that they would like to see me with a moustache.  So this November, I finally gave in and agreed.  This is Movember... the month when men that typically don't have any facial hair, grow a moustache.  It is to raise awareness for Prostate cancer, and the need to get checked.  So here I am, about half way into the month...  can't wait till the month comes to an end and I can shave this thing off...!!!


Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Winter Lifestyle

Winter has settled in a little earlier than usual here in central Alberta.  When I awoke on the weekend, this is what I found outside my living room window....
More than a little depressing... to say the least....
When I returned home from my hockey game on Saturday night/Sunday morning at around 1:00AM, it was -19C.  Not so bad all things considered.... My friend Frank tells me that it was -36C in Drunheller on Sunday morning when he got up...


At the encouragement of my business partners... who probably took the day off... I decided to open my shop on the holiday monday... Remembrance Day.  With the current weather conditions we are winding down for the season.  Although we have lots of things to clean up, there is a mood of hibernation in the air as we look towards our down time.  Nonetheless my staff will get an extra paid day over the Christmas break as we worked on Monday.  After work I came home and hit the darkroom, anxious to start printing...
T'is the season...
Now that shooting opportunities are limited to fair weather days, it is time to hit the darkroom and start printing.  As Ansel Adams used to say...   "the negative is the score, and the print is the performance..."
Not much point investing the time to capture all these images, and then spend the time processing the negatives, if I am not going to follow through and produce the finished work.  With two gallery exhibitions upcoming in 2013, it is time to get busy.
This time around I worked on two images that may end up being included in the Procession West exhibitions upcoiming in the summer of 2013...
As I fixed and toned these two prints, I took a couple of snapshots of the finished work intensifying in a bath of selenium toner...



Oops... who left that bottle of old Number Seven sitting there....

Monday, November 12, 2012

Winter Hockey - Game 10

The Renegades played a game on Saturday night against the Icebreakers.  This time around, unlike the last time we played them, they had a full bench and all of their better players.  I guess maybe the Renegades are being taken a little more seriously this season, as we remain solidly in first place in our division.  The game was close and we traded goals all evening.  Late in the third period we went ahead by a score of 5-4.  The Icebreakers pulled their goalie for an extra attacker, trying to tie the game.  But, we scored an empty net goal and coasted to a 6-4 victory.  This secures our hold on first place with a record of 7 victories, 2 loses and one overtime loss.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Delta 100 - PMK

Just before I left for the Fall Photo Weekend I processed a batch of Ilford Delta 100 4x5 in PMK developer.  This batch was given N+1 Development to increase contrast.  PMK is a developer formulated by Gordon Hutchings and it consists of Pyro, Metol and Kodalk [Sodium Metaborate].  It is a staining developer that yields a brown negative.  The stain is proportionate to the amount of silver in the emulsion and it adds some density to the image.  Negatives developed in Pyro hold extreme highlight detail.  I quite like this particular developer and use it with both Delta 100 and Kodak Tri-X Pan.  I have to remember to process it with my Jobo processor as every time that I tray process the negatives, as I did this time, I end up with some scratches in the emulsion.  I finally found time to scan a few from this latest batch.  Most of these date back to 2009, but a couple are from 2011 and 2012.










Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Winter Hockey - Game 9

While I was away in Jasper, the Renegades played Game Nine of the winter season.  I understand that it was a really close and hard fought game with the Oil City Wings.  But, the Renegades managed a win in a shootout, helping to solidify our first place standing in the Division.  I will be back out to the rink with the guys for Game 10.

Fall Photo Weekend

This past weekend was the annual Fall Photo Weekend.  I have attended every single one of these photo outings since my friend Jon and I started the tradition about 15 years ago.  Unfortunately Jon was not able to join in this time around.  Five members of the Monochrome Guild headed out to Jasper for a weekend of photography.  This included Arda, Court, Rob M., Tanja and myself.  We met up with local Jasper photographer Ron Brown.  Ron has lived in Jasper for many years and knows the area very well.  We were counting on his expertise to get us out to some new areas. 
I booked Friday November 2nd off from work and headed out of town early in the morning.  There was a fair bit of fresh snow as I entered the foothills, particularly at the Obed summit.  I met up with Rob and Ron just inside the park gate.  Rob had just spent the last three weeks shooting out at Vancouver Island, and was meeting up with us on his way back home.  We spent a few hours exploring and photographing along a small forested stream in the Athabasca valley.  It was heavily overcast with not much direct sun, so we were forced to turn our attention to small detail shots.  Later in the day Arda, Court and Tanja arrived and met up with us.  By mid-afternoon we decided to take a drive up the Maligne Road and did some shooting at Medicine Lake.  As the sun went down in the late afternoon we checked into our hotel rooms, and went out for an evening dinner.
The next morning we were up early.  After breakfast we headed south on the Icefields Parkway.  We made a brief stop at the Mount Christie viewpoint and then carried on to Beauty Creek.  Once again it was heavily overcast.  It was quite warm... up around +5C by afternoon, but there was several inches of wet snow on the ground, and it rained off and on.  We hiked up Beauty Creek to Stanley Falls and spent most of the day shooting here.  In places the canyon is quite narrow and deep and we had to be careful about our footing in the wet and slippery snow.  There were no tracks so obviously no other hikers had been in the area for a while.  The creek was still flowing reasonably well and there were a lot of interesting ice formations where it spilled over a series of small waterfalls and through some rapids.  Stanley Falls itself was difficult to photograph as it was obscured by trees from above, and the snowy slope was too steep and slippery to safely get down.  By evening we headed back to town and again went out for dinner.  Ron joined us again, and this time his wife came along as well.  They have just sold their home in Jasper and will be travelling to the south pacific for three months before eventually retiring out to Vancouver Island.  It was great that we had the chance to connect with Ron and get out shooting together before he moves away.
Sunday morning we again got up early and drove over to Old Fort Point.  We hiked up the ridge to the overview above the Athabasca valley.  The stairs and the trail were fairly treacherous with all the packed snow turning to ice.  I was surpised that we found some fresh bear tracks up on the ridge... probably a Grizzly judging by the size and the claws.  I would have expected that they had bedded down for their long winter nap by this time.  There was not much of an opportunity for photographs as the skies remained fairly overcast again.  We all attempted a couple of shots of the valley and of Pyramid Mountain, but nothing exceptional.  We eventually packed up and headed back down to begin the drive back home.  We had hoped to stop at a few places along the way and shoot our way out of the park, but the wind picked up, the clouds settled in and it began to rain.  We stopped a couple of times and checked things out but weather conditions just did not allow for any shooting.
The entire weekend I was so focused on large format shooting that my little point and shoot digital camera just never found it's way out of the truck.  So I have no snapshots to post and share on my blog.  I guess I will have to wait until I get around to processing some of the film that I shot, before I will be able to share them.  It was a successful weekend and I ended up coming home with nearly 30 exposed sheets of black and white film, as well as a few color shots.
It rained heavily most of the way home.  In places there was significant accumulations of nearly a foot of snow in the ditches, with the trees all covered, yet the rain was pouring down heavily.  Fortunately we were on the road early enough in the day that the rain didn't freeze.  But the temperature was dropping down to near zero by mid-afternoon and I'm sure the roads would have been really dangerous by later that evening.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Winter Hockey - Game 8

On Tuesday October 30th the Renegades played our 8th game of the winter season.  This was yet another late ice time.  We faced off against the Ice Hawks at Russ Barnes Arena.  We came out on the top side of a 6-3 score and helped to solidify our hold on first place in Division XI.  By the time I got home, showered and got to bed it was nearly 2:00 in the morning.  It sure was tough to get up and head off to work the next morning.

Halloween 2012

A very busy time of year for young girls.  On Saturday October 27th Margarit and I took the girls to the Halloween Spooktacular down at Fort Edmonton Park.  Weather conditions were less than ideal.  It was rather cold, and quite humid, with a brisk wind.  We struggled to keep warm as we wandered the grounds.  There were Halloween activities set up in various buildings around the site, and an opportunity for the kids to go "Trick-Or-Treating".  We checked out the restored Merry-Go-Round and then wandered around to the Haunted House, the Blood Bank, and to the lab of the Mad Scientist in the Pharmacy.  The girls had a lot of fun, but there were numerous stops to warm up...




Then on Monday October 29th we took the girls to a Halloween party at Kel-J-Do Stables, where they have been taking riding lessons all year.  Once again it was cold, humid and brisk.  We had a hot dog roast and some treats, and then there was a pumpkin carving contest.  Mostly the two younger girls were in and out of the vehicles warming up.  But Hailey was a pretty good sport and actually gave the pumpkin carving a go.  She ended up winning a ribbon for her efforts.




Finally on Wednesday the real Halloween came along.  I took all three girls out door to door with some neighbors for some Trick-Or-Treating.  Earlier that evening the girls reminded me, as they always do every year... "Dad, this is the best day of the year".  Of course they tell me the same thing every Christmas too...!
The weather remained unchanged... cool, humid and with a brisk wind.  Helena only lasted for a few houses before I had to take her back home.  Hailey went out with a friend and came home with a pretty good haul.  I stayed out with Anna, while Margarit stayed home and handed out treats.  After our neighbors called it a night, Anna and I pushed on down one more street, and hit another dozen houses or so.  She did really well on this last stretch, as we were one of the last groups out.  When neighbors saw what a cute little witch she was, they basically dumped the last of their treats into her bag.  I think she collected more in those last few houses than she did in the previous hour.  Eventually we headed home to warm up, and sort the spoils.  When the evening finally wound down, we had about 45 little ghosts and goblins stop by our door to collect their treats.



VAAA Open Photo 2012

Margarit and I attended the opening reception of the VAAA Open Photo Exhibition at the Kaasa Gallery in the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium.  This was on October 26th.  Attendance was moderate and the catering mediocre.  We felt somewhat overdressed as most of the crowd was very casual and not very fitting of the occasion.  I must say that there were more present and a better mood at the Monochrome Guild's recent Friends and Family show.  My print, "Anna's Swing" was awarded an honorable mention.  It appears that mine, and two by fellow Guild member Gord Dinwoodie, were the only traditional prints.  All the rest were digital.  I did not agree with the selection of the judges as, for the most part, they seemed to prefer abstract and highly manipulated work.  Perhaps my honorable mention was not such an honor after all.  Nonetheless I accepted my certificate and we enjoyed the evening.