Wednesday, September 22nd, 2021

a 170 year old process and high end food photography

everybody knows that I work exclusively on collodion wet plate portraits. So what’s the reason for food photography now? Let me try to explain. Many of you guys will remember that I bought a Cambo studio stand some while ago (https://blog.markus-hofstaetter.at/2021/02/my-new-150kg-studio-stand-that-is-from-1957-cambo-ast/ ). A little bit later I bought a used tray for it on Ebay. The seller was very friendly and somehow we started to talk about photography. Long story short, a month later we decided to do a project together. After months of planing, Hans Gerlach (a well known food photographer and columnist) drove over to my studio and brought his tools and some delicious food with him. Additional food for this shooting came from my garden, this way I could bring a bit more into the project besides my wet plate photography. During the planing period we discussed different dishes, their colours and how they would appear on a tintype (the wet collodion process only sees blue light and therefore red colours will turn black and blue white). We saw this come together as kind of a first test and wanted to see what what we could create. For me it was very interesting to have a chef working in my kitchen.

I enjoyed it a lot to watch a chef doing his thing

I suggested the 13x18cm format, because the camera is not too huge and can be easy mounted over head. We can get a bit more depth of field because of this smaller format. And I have a beautiful 250mm Zeiss Tessar lens that I can stop down to about F16 without having to long exposure times (two Hensel generators with 9000 w/s together helped to archive that and remember, its called wet plate, because the plate needs to be wet the whole time and can not dry). I mounted this 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-format-bokeh-monster/ )

Even I know the Cambo tripod and the Mentor camera is made for such operation, it still looks a bit scary

Even this studio Mentor camera and the tripod are meant for that kind of work, it felt funny to see my tools in that position.

While I prepared everything in my darkroom, Hans Gerlach did his magic in my kitchen. We were very excited to work on the first plate. And after we saw the result, we were even more excited, the outcome was gorgeous. So we worked very long on the first day (I think I went to bed at 4 am). But it was not all glory. We shot so many plates, that at some point my silver nitrate bath went bad. First I thought it was the collodion, the fixer and the developer, but after I changed all of that(I am always good prepared for important shootings and create everything twice or even three times) and still got funny looking plates, I know I need to change the silver nitrate bath.

A lot of troubleshooting was involved to make this go away

After I changed the bath, everything was fine again and we could go on with the shooting.

sourdough bread with butter and welsh onion

We shot many different styles of the sourdough bread until we were happy with the outcome. This is one of our favourites plates. To hold it in our hands after months of planing and all the work we put together was wonderful. If you are interested in a print of this plate or any other, check out this link: prints.mhaustria.com

But this little setback should not be the only thing that kept me busy this day. After shooting many plates, my modified wet plate holder made my life a bit harder. Sometimes the plate won’t stay in place and the end result of that was a scratched plate….

this is something every wet plate artist have to face from time to time

I quickly solved the problem with a little redesign on the plate holder and from that on I was able to shoot without any problem. Before capturing every new dish, we were excited to see how it will turn out.
And most of them turned out great, I really like the beans and the spoon with chocolate mousse. The sheer amount of detail and texture of these scans from the wet plates are just incredible. They will look amazing on a big print.

green beans with whipped goat cheese and fennel flowers
This will look great on a big canvas

spoon with chocolate mousse grated chocolate

To get as much done as possible, I scanned all 13x18cm (about 200mpix) and 18x24cm (about 300mpix, I decided later to do two bigger plates too) plates at night and also varnish them afterwards. So this night was quite short 🙂

I shot the bigger plates with a 150 year old Dallmeyer 2b Petzval lens to mix the this delicious bread with the beautiful swirly bokeh from this old lens. I really like how this plate turned out and how the out of focus areas look like.

sourdough bread with welsh onion and radishes
It amazes me again and again how sharp these old lenses are

After these intense shoots, we were always rewarded with great looking plates amazing tasting food.

I am still dreaming f that desert

Hans created also amazing tasting handmade pasta

culurgiones – sardinian ravioli with wild herbs

To give you guys a much better idea of this shooting, I tried to captures as much footage as possible to bring you behind the scenes with this video

On thing is sure, we enjoyed our work together a lot and will do more like that in the future, but that needs again lots of planning. I am very happy that I met Hans and his work inspired me (yes there is also a inspired portrait coming up). I really look forward to our next shooting together (and yes, I also look forward to eat everything 🙂

Because I get asked very often about the tools I use for the wet plate process, I created a shopping list here: list.mhaustria.com

  • Get yourself a beautiful print here: http://prints.mhaustria.com
  • Looking for wet plate gear? http://gear.mhaustria.com
  • Buy me a tea: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/mhaustria
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  • Get cool analog shirts here shirts.mhaustria.com
  • For online wet plate workshops, visit this http://online.mhaustria.com
  • For private wetplate workshops (Nassplattenworkshop contact me here: http://www.markus-hofstaetter.at/pages/kontakt/ (German and English available)
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  • 14 Responses to “a 170 year old process and high end food photography”

    1. September 22nd, 2021 at 19:08

      Video: Using wet-plate collodion photography process for high-end food photography: Digital Photography Review – the gadget g said:

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    2. September 22nd, 2021 at 19:15

      Video: Using wet-plate collodion photography process for high-end food photography | iTech News said:

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    3. September 22nd, 2021 at 19:17

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    4. September 22nd, 2021 at 19:43

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    5. September 22nd, 2021 at 19:51

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    6. September 22nd, 2021 at 19:59

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    7. September 22nd, 2021 at 20:14

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    8. September 22nd, 2021 at 20:43

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    9. September 23rd, 2021 at 00:51

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    10. September 23rd, 2021 at 02:08

      Video: Using wet-plate collodion photography process for high-end food photography: Digital Photography Review said:

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    11. September 23rd, 2021 at 08:41

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    12. September 23rd, 2021 at 20:21

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

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    13. September 24th, 2021 at 03:20

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    14. February 3rd, 2022 at 14:00

      Markus Hofstaetter's blog » Inspired Series – Hans Gerlach – Christian Jungwirth – Wolfgang Mlakar said:

      […] tripod on Ebay. After some calls we decided to do a project together. Check the outcome of it here: https://blog.markus-hofstaetter.at/2021/09/a-170-year-old-process-and-high-end-food-photography/ When I worked with Hans Gerlach this project, his passion about cooking and setting up a scene on a […]



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