Seeing is Everything
I wait for the waves to come swirling around my feet and when they do, I gasp. The northwestern Pacific Ocean waters are cold, so cold. Gorgeous but unapologetically frigid. Enough to send me running for the blanket, which I immediately sprawl out on. Ava refuses to let the cold water stop her. She wades bravely out into the ocean and I watch as her body takes on soft undulations, I watch as the waves slap unevenly against her skin. She calls out to me and I know what she wants. She wants me to join her. Too cold, I yell back. But she pleads with me, she wears me down. Reluctantly, I grab the Nikon, the Argus Seventy-Five (with the wacky cardboard contraption attached) and make my way towards the water. I look into the viewfinder of the old camera and find Ava. She fills the frame of the tiny glass square and I see her with new eyes. I point the lens of my Nikon into the cardboard device attached to the Argus and I begin to shoot. And I forget about the temperature of the water. My feet are numb but I am oblivious. I can't stop looking, can't stop shooting.
I first read about the Through The Viewfinder technique (aka TtV) back in 2006. I followed a link to a link to another link and before I knew it, I was constructing my first device out of an old cereal box. Through the Viewfinder photography is the using of one camera to take a picture of an image in another camera's viewfinder. In essence, using the second camera's viewfinder as a lens. Two years later and I have come to look at it as my secret weapon. When I am stuck in a photographic rut, I reach for my Nikon/Argus/Duaflex combination and hit the streets. I look down through the viewfinder and my framing changes, I see things so differently. I realize this can be said for most photographic techniques but something about TtV excites me in totally different way. It's the perfect combination of old and new. Simple but complicated. And so accessible. It's the next best thing to loading the camera up with film. And while it will never replace shooting with film, it comes in a very close second. I'll admit, I'm hooked. I'm riding high and waving the TtV flag. I'm not too proud to wave the flag.
And I'm converting sisters along the way. If this interests you, I've written a lengthier breakdown (which will lead you to a whole mess of TtV linkage) over on my blog. Enough to get you started, enough to get your feet wet. And I recommend getting your feet wet. Whether it's with TtV or something else. Whatever takes you out of your comfort zone and plops you right down in the middle of someplace new, whatever forces you to see the world differently, whatever that is for you. Wade out into the cold, unknown waters. It's the only way.
Picture and words courtesy of honorary sister/guess blogger Andrea Jenkins perhaps better known as Hula, woman extraordinaire behind Hula Seventy & girlhula a la Flickr.
Reader Comments (26)
I too love ttv photography. I had a gallery show of just my ttv images, where hearing people reflect on how they felt looking at the images, convinced me that it is a powerful method of storytelling.
This image is gorgeous!
http://flickr.com/photos/laurohunt/sets/72157605341035086/
I've shot some people shots but only just recently learned of a good PSE method for eliminating some of the dust and noise off the skin.
http://www.wayfaringwanderer.com/2008/09/new-england-aster-diptych.html
I have also written an article about the technique.
http://www.tzplanet.com/words/be-creative-with-old-cameras-through-the-viewfinder/85
http://drawingsinmotion.blogspot.com/search/label/TtV%20-%20Through%20The%20Viewfinder
you rock.
i absolutely LOVE how you see the world. and how you document it with your photos and words :)
xo
Tracy
www.HappyDaisyAZ.blogspot.com
I first saw this type of photo when I found some of Alicia Bock's work. It was so beautiful! That's what originally made me want to learn more about photography - I wanted to be able to make something like that. Now, I have both a Duaflex and an Argoflex camera that I found in a local "junk" shop.(They are very inexpensive on eBay, as well). They have this wonderful silvery look when you look into the viewfinder - like looking into a very old mirror.
I didn't get my box contraption right until the second try. I need a lot more practice. And subjects. I can't wait to see my favorite bridges through the viewfinder. Here's a link to a page in my blog that has a couple of posts showing some ttv.
http://askewtoyou.blogspot.com/search?q=ttv
I look forward to seeing what others come up with. It feels like part photography and part science experiment.
Here's my set of TtV on flickr.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/juliealvarez/sets/72157607326531552/
Thanks for all the tips.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/partonponderings/2733548918/