Such a cool project and process with the wet plates. Ian really creates some amazing images. The whole team at Framed did a great job with this video. Awesome interview and questions from the host as well.
I love this so much it makes me cry with joy knowing that passion and dedication can be so beautiful and true for all of us so many people will never understand the beauty in this world we would not have seen them if it was not for people to capture them thank you
Thank you for you inspiring video, I also own a Mammoth camera I found in a thrift store I have just finished restoring it and am exited to get it out on the road but still have a long ways to go. Keep up the great work.
I love the Silver and Light guys, it was nice to hear a little more of an in-depth interview from their own words, now that things have developed more for them.
Huge Wet Plates are ridiculously high res. They certainly were not the bottleneck in their case. I don't know about their lenses. Being huge in size likely helps, but their optical quality most likely is their limit
Hi. Good job, very impressive what you are doing there. Please give me some details about that lens. I know somebody who have several lenses from some old cinema projectors, some very big machines and big lenses. Do you think i can find something what can i use to make a camera like your? Thanks
I was just mixing some wet plate chemistry last night. So glad to watch this video. Sometimes you get 'mixed' up in all the tasks and work to do and you lose sight of 'why' you are doing it and how it makes you feel. So thanks for the inspiration!!! I am in Maine. It is so beautiful here, perhaps you may make it out this way one day. :-)
Hi Chris, I am in Portland, where are you? I just got a spot in John Coffer ' Camp Tintype this coming June and plan on attending the Jamboree. I'd love to hear where you are in the process of learning. Nice to hear from someone in our great state.
Tina Davidson I'm in New Gloucester. I was at Camp Tintype this past July; it was amazing. Right now, I'm spending the winter trying to get together equipment to begin shooting my own tintypes in the spring. My email is Grannys_Shottgunn@hotmail.com. I'd like to pick your brain.
...And requires the use of highly toxic and flammable chemicals(the respirators and hazmat suits that Ian and his hipster crew are wearing are not for show) ?
I feel so good when seeing young people doing this kind of things, meaningful and great!
Such a cool project and process with the wet plates. Ian really creates some amazing images. The whole team at Framed did a great job with this video. Awesome interview and questions from the host as well.
Really fantastic photgraphs.
I love this so much it makes me cry with joy knowing that passion and dedication can be so beautiful and true for all of us so many people will never understand the beauty in this world we would not have seen them if it was not for people to capture them thank you
15:52 is some Ansel Adams stuff!
It's so cool and inspiring to see Ian and the guys fully going after their dreams and living life to the fullest.
Thank you for you inspiring video, I also own a Mammoth camera I found in a thrift store I have just finished restoring it and am exited to get it out on the road but still have a long ways to go. Keep up the great work.
Glad to see your doing well Ian. From an old old friend from South Shore. (Causey)
Those photographs are amazing... I'd love to have a family portrait of my wife and kids done like this
That was great, always love seeing the Silver and Light guys.
I love the Silver and Light guys, it was nice to hear a little more of an in-depth interview from their own words, now that things have developed more for them.
These are probably some of the most high resolution photographs taken on earth.
Huge Wet Plates are ridiculously high res. They certainly were not the bottleneck in their case.
I don't know about their lenses. Being huge in size likely helps, but their optical quality most likely is their limit
awesome work bruh!! What lens (or lenses) are you using?
Hi. Good job, very impressive what you are doing there. Please give me some details about that lens. I know somebody who have several lenses from some old cinema projectors, some very big machines and big lenses. Do you think i can find something what can i use to make a camera like your? Thanks
I was just mixing some wet plate chemistry last night. So glad to watch this video. Sometimes you get 'mixed' up in all the tasks and work to do and you lose sight of 'why' you are doing it and how it makes you feel. So thanks for the inspiration!!! I am in Maine. It is so beautiful here, perhaps you may make it out this way one day. :-)
I'm in Maine, too. I'm just starting getting into wet plate. Where in Maine are you?
Hi Chris, I am in Portland, where are you? I just got a spot in John Coffer ' Camp Tintype this coming June and plan on attending the Jamboree. I'd love to hear where you are in the process of learning. Nice to hear from someone in our great state.
Tina Davidson
I'm in New Gloucester. I was at Camp Tintype this past July; it was amazing. Right now, I'm spending the winter trying to get together equipment to begin shooting my own tintypes in the spring. My email is Grannys_Shottgunn@hotmail.com. I'd like to pick your brain.
Bring these back please!!!!
Great job!
Could you recommend a good place to buy the chemicals, thanks.
great filming and editing
Wow!!!!
What picture taking situation would cost $300,000?
...And requires the use of highly toxic and flammable chemicals(the respirators and hazmat suits that Ian and his hipster crew are wearing are not for show) ?
This video again? Don't get it :/
"think about it... do bongs"
This reminds me of Heisenberg in Breaking bad cooking meth.
More Peter Lik than Avedon.
peter lik what an appropriate name eh
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Supppeer
damn... would be fucking funny/shitty if he ended up taking Trumps pic
I was enjoying this until you mentioned that you wanted to photograph the president, then you lost me, I stopped watching.
You're dumb.
marcuelcajon So you are a fan of Barry Soetoro!
If someone's political view discouraged you from appreciating him as a specialist, you're stupid.