Monday, March 30, 2020

Review--Hahnemuehle Bamboo Fine Art Inkjet Paper 290 gsm

An exciting aspect of digital inkjet printing is the wide range of paper surfaces available, an important element of the print’s expression. Now, a new concept in paper composition, surface and “look” has become available—Hahnemuehle’s Bamboo 290gsm, part of the company’s “Natural” lineup.
Photo: Courtesy Hahnemuehle: The Hahnemuehle Natural Lineup includes Bamboo, the subject of this review, and Agave and Hemp made papers. The other papers in the lineup will be reviewed in a future posting.

There are two aspects to the Natural line that make them intriguing: one is the sustainable manufacturing process. All the materials that supply the cellulose in these papers are made from raw materials that require minimal maintenance, grow quickly and do not need any pesticides. The other is their unique look and feel. This review covers Hahnemuehle’s Bamboo paper, dubbed by the company to be ideal for “spiritual” black and white and color images. In addition, the paper is made with no OBAs (optical brightening agents) and has “certified archivability”—their phrase, not mine.

Paper Surface and Rendition
Bamboo is a natural white, warm tone paper with a lightly textured, almost buff surface that I found to be an interesting choice for warm tone and certain other monochrome images. The paper is somewhat warm, but not brown/yellow, although when a blank sheet is held next to a bright white paper the differences become apparent.  In my tests it also performed well with color, albeit those that lend themselves to a low-saturation rendition. In terms of monochrome, it gave me impressive results from a series of images made with an IR (infrared) altered digital camera, probably the most expressive prints from those images I have ever made. Perhaps as important, it engenders a search for other images that would benefit from its unique look and feel.
My first instinct for testing was a group of images made with an IR-converted DSLR. This photo was made in The Everglades, and the paper match was just right and resulted in the most expressive prints I have ever made from this set. Copyright George Schaub.

Test Procedure
I did my tests using a Canon Pro-1000 printer and processed via Photoshop. I first downloaded the ICC profile from the Hanhnemuehle web site (www.hahnemuehle.com) and added it to my Color Sync profiles on my Mac. I printed using the dedicated profile in Photoshop managed color as well as printer managed (with black and white checked in the dialog box for monochromes), choosing heavy weight matte as the media. Both worked with matte black ink. The fairly heavy weight (290 gsm) requires a single sheet rear loading procedure with this Canon and other similar level desktop printers.

This is a single-sided (coated) paper, so it’s important to determine the printable side, as the slight texture can make it difficult at first to tell front from back. You can feel the difference by running your fingertip along the surface to feel the grain, which is slight in this paper. I could also see a distinct difference in the surfaces when angling the paper back and forth under a strong light. The company literature advises, if need be, to get a sense of front from back by slightly wetting your finger to feel the more “resistant” grain, although I hesitated to do this, fearing I would harm the print surface, but if you do this be sure to do so along an edge.

The company also advises that you might get a slight coating loss onto the print transport after running numerous prints, and suggests that you run one or a few (uncoated) standard sheets through to clear the transport, which should handle any problems. (Note: I did not notice any problems in that regard after going through 25 sheets of 13x19” paper.)

Print Controls and Options
As mentioned, I ran some tests using both printer and Photoshop managed color, the former using “heavyweight Fine Art matte” and the latter using the downloaded profile. Side-by-side I noticed slight differences in the darker values, with the profiled print showing slightly more open values, but nothing dramatic. There was also a very slight difference in the print color, with the Photoshop-profiled one being somewhat more neutral in tone than the printer-profiled one, which was a tad warmer.


While tonal values on prints are not always literally translated to repro, the paper can produce a deep black, although it certainly does not have the snap found in glossy or Vellin surfaces. It's more like a "buff" black look, akin to charcoal or chalk pastel. Copyright:  George Schaub

One control you might want to test is found in the small checkboxes under the preview in Photoshop, particularly “Match Print Color.” Click it on and off to see what best matches the image you have loaded. In some cases it can be quite noticeable, and assuming your setup is profiled it will give you a better visual idea of what will result. In some cases it can help with “un-muddying” darker values and resulted in a crisper, though not deep black, but again test this, as it seems to be image dependent.

Image Intent
This brings up matching image with idea and result with intent. This is a paper that renders values in a unique way, one that you could describe as “spiritual.” It’s not a matter of sharpness, but of mood. I would not choose this paper for color-rich or deep black value images, which I usually print to bring out the “snap.” That’s why my first instinct was working with those IR images, which have unique mid-range and especially highlight values. In that sense it is a paper designed for select, not general printing.


Bamboo is versatile enough to allow you to create a wide range of expression. This photo was made with a Lensbaby auxiliary lens and has a naturally soft "aura." I dropped the saturation to match the mood and came up with a look and feel that was quite different from any print I had ever made from this image. Copyright George Schaub

This became apparent when I switched from IR to landscapes with high contrast values, which I usually print on a Vellin or smooth rag surface. The blacks are there in the Bamboo stock, but have a feeling of buff rather than hard rendition. I printed some images deep with very slightly suppressed highlights, and found that every nuance came through in both highlights and mid-tones. In any case it’s a unique look, one that creates an entirely different impression than other papers.

(One tip is to give the print time to dry down before you make any quick adjustments. The print sets after an hour or so, although you probably should give it more time before you rush back to change the contrast or value settings, especially in dark tonal areas.)

One option perhaps worthy of exploration is making copy prints from old images. I copied this carte de visite from the nineteenth century and tried it out and got a nice rendition of values that, combined with the print surface, gave it a true look and feel.

Conclusion
Overall, I always welcome new papers to add to my creative gamut, and given the right image and processing, Hahnemuehle’s Bamboo 290 gsm will hold a special place in my paper stock cabinet when it comes to nature, landscape and even portraiture. While monochrome printers should certainly consider checking it out, those trying it with color images of a certain mood and style will also find new expressive avenues to explore.


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: Hemp is a bright white matt paper with a slight textural surface, ideal for color work; and Agave has a more textural surface with a bright white base. All the papers are 290gsm and none use optical brighteners.

Saturday, March 7, 2020

Interview Series Part 1: Gordon Parks

The following is an excerpt from an interview by Grace Schaub with Gordon Parks in 1998. This interview and 33 others are contained in the book "Twentieth Century Photographers" published by Focal Press, copies of which can be ordered via the Focal Press and Amazon websites in hardback, soft cover and e-book editions. This is Part 1 of a series of interviews with photographers that will be posted on this site.

Grace Schaub: What did working for Roy Stryker and the FSA do for your photographic career?

Gordon Parks: Going to the FSA was the turning point in my career.  I learned how to use the camera as a weapon against discrimination, poverty, and all the things one likes or dislikes about the universe.

GS: What was Stryker's influence on the photographers who worked with him?

GP: Stryker wasn't a photographer himself, as you know, but we would talk about how to point a camera, where to point it, and how to speak with it.

GS: The FSA, then, was a good training ground for you?

GP: I think working with Roy Stryker, and the photographers I was fortunate enough to work with, formed my opinions about how to shoot a picture--the structure of it, and so on. All of us were inclined to shoot a picture full frame--the way we saw it, and that's the way we wanted to see it published.  After working a few years with the FSA, it became natural for me to shoot and see this way.  Years later, when I worked at LIFE magazine, the editors very seldom cropped my pictures, even when it came to my fashion work. The picture editors were respectful of certain photographers and the way they shot, like Eugene Smith, who shot with the entire scene in mind--just like a painter approaches his or her painting.  You wouldn't crop a Picasso or a Degas. The editors had that kind of respect for you. Even today, I look at something and I frame it immediately.  Its always a balance, its automatic, not a search.  You look and there it is, the composition comes immediately.

GS: Do you think an FSA or a "Stryker" force would be relevant today?

GP: We certainly need it. Stryker always taught us to think before we shot--and not to just use up a lot of film.  He would prefer you came back with ten pictures as long as they were good, rather than one hundred that were so-so.  He didn't like you to use a wide angle lens unless the picture called for one.  Today, photographers use a wide angle lens for every shot just because it's a good focal length, and they don't have to worry about depth of field.  We were more discriminating in our choice of lenses. We would use the lens that suited the purpose and the subject matter.

GS: What camera format are you most comfortable using?

GP: I've used a 2 1/4 for awhile and its fine for fashion, faces, and details, but Ive learned to love the 35mm format.  I had a Contax, a Rolliflex, and at one time a Speed Graphic, but when I got to LIFE magazine, I prefered to use a 35mm camera.  They wanted the photographers to use the larger formats back then, but we crammed it down their throats because it was so much more flexible to go with the smaller format.  Working with the 35mm camera was good training for my future involvement with film directing.  The first film I shot,The Learning Tree, was in Panavision, which is practically the same format, so it served me well.

GS: When you were working for the FSA you were shooting in black and white?  At LIFE was it mostly black and white or color?

GP: Most of the stories were in black and white. Eventually we got into color.  Fashion stories were invariably shot in color to show the fabrics.  Certain stories just didn't come off in color.  I did a story on discrimination in the south, and shot it all in color.  When I saw the results, I felt it just didn't work as well as black and white would have.  I was assigned to shoot another story on discrimination, this time in the north, and told my editors I wanted to shoot in black and white.  I did, and it was much more effective than the color piece.

GS: Why was that?

GP: There is something about color--the gradations of the tones, that can make a dirty street or even a rag look beautiful. You might be shooting the most catastrophic scene in the world--for example poverty or the war zone.  Color takes away from the harshness that is needed to show poverty-stricken areas.  I know if I had shot Flavio in color it would have been a disaster.  Certain things are a natural to shoot in black and white.

GS: Would the editors generally give you the option?

GP: Yes, the editors at LIFE pretty much left it to the discretion of the photographer.  They seldom pressed you to shoot in color unless you really felt you needed it.  They may have asked you to carry a couple of rolls of color film also, and if something was beautiful, and you weren't trying to say more than that, you went with color. 

GS: What was it like working at LIFE magazine during what is considered the "golden era" of photography?

GP: That was the golden era.  We had all the big format magazines like LIFE, LOOK, THE SATURDAY EVENING POST, where photographers could really spread out their work.  The beauty of working for LIFE in those days was that they didn't give you any time limit.  You could stay on assignment until you got the coverage you needed, rather than rush back, because of lack of funds or time.

GS: No deadlines?

GP: Generally, there weren't any tight deadlines.  Unless, of course, you were covering a topical story and it was needed that week to close out the magazine.  In which case, you hustled and got it off as quickly as possible.

If you were in Paris or London, you got your film developed at the labs and they sent it back to the states for you directly.  In many cases, the photographer didn't get to see his pictures until he returned to the U.S. And that could be two years down the road.

I remember once shooting a story for LIFE on American Poets, I worked on it for one year.  There are certain things you have to wait for, you can't force them.  If you don't wait your pictures will show you forced it. I came in and handed the editors twelve 35mm transparencies for the story.  That's what I wanted.  I shot the poets I wanted and selected the pictures, they accepted it, and ran it.  For that story, I spent a year meeting and photographing poets, reading poetry, and interpreting it the way I wanted for the story. 

In a similar vein, for the magazine SHOW, I went to Brazil to try and capture the feeling of the music of Villa-Lobos.  I also wrote poetry along with the pictures I shot.  It was a very difficult thing to do, but it made me think.

GS: How did you develop this approach to covering a story?

GP: I learned it from Stryker.  Although, I didn't write poetry for him while at the FSA, I learned to take the time to think about my work from him.  And that's what I feel is needed today.  Photographers should learn to think before they shoot--not just send a barrage of shots off with a high-powered, motorized camera.  You would be surprised at the number of photographs brought to the lab at Life magazine by just one photographer covering a football game. Sometimes two hundred rolls of film are shot for just one assignment, and only three or four pictures are used.

GS: That's a lot of film.

GP: Its an absolute waste of film.  The photographer puts his or her camera up there and shoots in a motorized situation, and knows something will come out of it.  Well, I don't like to shoot that way.  I don't like equipment that tells me what to do, I like to be able to tell the equipment what to do.  So, I don't buy all the fancy new gadgets and cameras.  I still have my old cameras.

GS: Many photographers on assignment today have deadlines, limited time, and budgets, and the work is rushed in.

GP: Stryker would send you off on a story to cover New England.  If you asked him, "Where do I go."  His answer would be, "Go where you want to go, to New England."  Well, then,"When should I come back?"  Stryker would say " Don't worry about it--go shoot and come back when you feel as though you've got the story covered.  Just keep in touch with the home office."   Stryker was the same way at Standard Oil when I worked for him there.  He sent us out to cover America.  Well, he knew you couldn't cover it in a week or two; for something like that you would be gone for about six months.

GS: Sounds like a great way to work.

GP: When you are given that kind of flexibility, you learn a lot more, and you're not just shooting a lot of stuff that isn't necessary.  But, I know  there are many photographers who have only a week in which to complete their assignment, so they shoot as much as possible.

GS: How has photography affected your life?

GP: Photography has made it possible for me to do many things.  I didn't take to writing until I was assigned to the Paris bureau for LIFE magazine.  It was there I met Camus and Richard Wright.  I got to know so many people in Paris who inspired me.  I wanted to say something with the typewriter.  I also started composing music in Paris.  It had always been my ambition to be a concert pianist.

GS: In what year were you assigned to the Paris bureau?

GP: 1950. 

GS: What was it like for you over there?

GP: I was not so caught up being a black man in a foreign country.  Here, in America, it was an ongoing fight against discrimination--before the sixties it was a constant battle.  Your thoughts centered on one thing--survival.

When I got to Paris my mind was free and I began to pursue other things.  I was able to take time to compose, write, and do all those things I wanted to do.  I also had time between assignments.  At LIFE, it could be two months before another assignment came through, and I wouldn't waste that time. I either  wrote poetry, composed music, or wrote books.

GS: Were there any opportunities denied you in photography?

GP: I haven't been denied much in photography.  I pretty much had my own way at the FSA.  I wasn't shuttled off to do certain things because I was black.  At LIFE magazine, I covered royalty, fashion, crime, poverty, discrimination--I did everything. LIFE was very good about that.

GS: The nineteen sixties was a decade of political and racial unrest, and you covered many of LIFE's most historically important stories.  Would you talk about your relationship with the magazine during that time?

GP: The difficult thing about the sixties was that when reporting on the Black Muslims, the Black Panthers, and black leaders like Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, and others, I had to walk a very tight rope.  I let all the people I covered know that they shouldn't tell me or do anything they didn't want me to report, because I'm here to report--and they understood that.  I went to talk to Eldridge Cleaver when he was in exile in Algiers.  He understood my position, in fact, he offered me the post of Minister of Information of the Black Panthers.  I wasn't out there as a black reporter, but as a reporter, and I had to prove to LIFE magazine that I could do it, and they had faith in me.  I've called myself an objective reporter with a subjective heart.  I had to look and size things up for myself without overloading them.  Once I did that, LIFE had confidence in me doing anything.  But I'm sure, at first they thought they couldn't send Gordon out to do the Black Muslim story because he's going to overload it, because he's black also.  But I proved differently, and that I was as fair as I could possibly be in the situation.

Those were rough times.  I had to write my own stories.  I couldn't trust anyone else to write them because one word could twist the meaning--just one word, so I had to check all the stories before they were put out on the line.  I had to be sure everything was correct--It could have been very dangerous for me also.

GS: Did you welcome the opportunities to do those stories?

GP: Yes.  For instance, when Martin Luther King was assassinated, LIFE called me up.  I was out in Hollywood working on a film at the time.  They said, "Gordon, this is for you, can you write the piece?" I said, "Sure, I'll be on the next plane to Atlanta for the funeral," and I was.   For stories like that, they would say, "Nobody can do it like you," and I wanted to do those  stories. It was the same thing with the Black Muslims, the Panthers, Malcolm X, and Stokely Carmichael.  The magazine knew I could get closer than a white photographer could.  And, I wanted to do those stories very much because they were roaring times in the sixties and I wanted to be there with my camera.  So, I was never limited one way or another.  I never suffered particularly by being a black photographer.