Wednesday, August 4th, 2021

Shooting Wet Plate Portraits with an affordable Large Format Bokeh Monster

I should stop calling these “Short Projects” short projects. It didn’t take that long, but still longer as expected.
After I bought it at the Camera Obscura Festival
But I still think if you are looking for a affordable large format wet plate camera, you should have a look at the Mentor camera brand. Most of them are build like a tank (Remember, I got another Mentor too, where I did double exposures with: https://youtu.be/y0ccDnXw9xE) and easy to repair. The cool thing of this camera is the curtain shutter and strobe connector. It has also all movements you can imagine, great for architecture, product (or food) photography.
For the wet plate process, you want to look for a fast lens, but these are mostly pretty expensive. Thats why projection lenses are a good options, but most of them are triplet designs – but there are others too, like the Leitz Hektor 200mm F 2.5 that covers 13x18cm plates in portrait distance easily and has 4 glass elements instead of the classic triplets. be aware that the depth of field is razor thin on that lens. I have a second one for sale here http://gear.mhaustria.com with other camera gear I only use very rarely. So I would be happy if this finds someone who uses it again. I just collected to much gear….
In the video, I show you how I repair all the little blemishes of the camera and add two Lenses to it. I even build two lens plateadapters. One to mount lenses from my Century camera to the Mentor and one to mount Linhof Lenses to the Century camera. Check my Thingverse too, I will post some of them there if I am happy with them. . The more I get comfortable with my 3D printer the more I use it, that reflects also in this project. Even some prints take pretty long (my longest one was 16 hours), it saves me lots of time, because I can do different things in-between. And some of the designs would have been much harder to create with traditional wood/metal working.
I really like how the camera, lens plates and wet plate holder turned out. This will be used on many during my workshops (for English ones contact me here)in the future And I am also very happy that Tanja of https://www.unikat.pictures/ helped me out to model for me. Thanks a lot!
If you liked this kind of projects and want to support my upcoming ones, you ca do that here

Get yourself a beautiful print here: http://prints.mhaustria.com

Get cool analog shirts here shirts.mhaustria.com


4 Responses to “Shooting Wet Plate Portraits with an affordable Large Format Bokeh Monster”

  1. September 22nd, 2021 at 13:00

    Markus Hofstaetter's blog » a 170 year old process and high end food photography said:

    […] beauty of a lens on my 13x18cm Mentor camera (check this article for my renovation of the beauty: https://blog.markus-hofstaetter.at/2021/08/shooting-wet-plate-portraits-with-an-affordable-large-for… […]

  2. September 23rd, 2021 at 02:08

    Dimosbox.gr Blog - Video: Using wet-plate collodion photography process for high-end food photography - said:

    […] difficult to work with in small spaces or to shoot from an overhead view. Hofstaetter opted for a 13 x 18cm format Mentor camera and a 250mm Zeiss Tessar lens that can be stopped down to F16 without requiring a lot of light. […]

  3. September 23rd, 2021 at 20:21

    Taking pictures excessive finish meals images on moist plate massive format appears superb – Moms Love To Shop said:

    […] be moist the entire time and can’t dry). I mounted this fantastic thing about a lens on my 13x18cm Mentor […]

  4. September 23rd, 2021 at 21:32

    Taking pictures excessive finish meals images on moist plate giant format seems to be superb - Shop said:

    […] must be moist the entire time and can’t dry). I mounted this great thing about a lens on my 13x18cm Mentor […]



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