How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30?How to simulate a red wine stain?How can I visualise in monochrome via an optical viewfinder?How was Claire Benoist's flower diptych picture shot?How do I create a nighttime B&W image but have the subject illuminated by light in full color?Lightroom: create smart collection for specific development setting value?How to create still life silhouettes with candle lights?How can I improve the sharpness for tabletop still life of photography?How to keep fruits and other objects in a vertical position?How to create a gray/black color background in a photographHow can I find the origin of a classic Italian monochrome print?

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How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30?

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How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30?


How to simulate a red wine stain?How can I visualise in monochrome via an optical viewfinder?How was Claire Benoist's flower diptych picture shot?How do I create a nighttime B&W image but have the subject illuminated by light in full color?Lightroom: create smart collection for specific development setting value?How to create still life silhouettes with candle lights?How can I improve the sharpness for tabletop still life of photography?How to keep fruits and other objects in a vertical position?How to create a gray/black color background in a photographHow can I find the origin of a classic Italian monochrome print?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















I usually shot outdoor when plenty of natural light is available, so I don't really care about flash, reflectors, etc (mostly street photography, sometimes landscape).



After seeing the famous Edward Weston's Pepper No. 30, I think still life photography is really interesting, too.



enter image description here



I wonder what was the setup he used. Did he used a flash or a continuous light? And any reflectors, perhaps?









share




























    2















    I usually shot outdoor when plenty of natural light is available, so I don't really care about flash, reflectors, etc (mostly street photography, sometimes landscape).



    After seeing the famous Edward Weston's Pepper No. 30, I think still life photography is really interesting, too.



    enter image description here



    I wonder what was the setup he used. Did he used a flash or a continuous light? And any reflectors, perhaps?









    share
























      2












      2








      2


      1






      I usually shot outdoor when plenty of natural light is available, so I don't really care about flash, reflectors, etc (mostly street photography, sometimes landscape).



      After seeing the famous Edward Weston's Pepper No. 30, I think still life photography is really interesting, too.



      enter image description here



      I wonder what was the setup he used. Did he used a flash or a continuous light? And any reflectors, perhaps?









      share














      I usually shot outdoor when plenty of natural light is available, so I don't really care about flash, reflectors, etc (mostly street photography, sometimes landscape).



      After seeing the famous Edward Weston's Pepper No. 30, I think still life photography is really interesting, too.



      enter image description here



      I wonder what was the setup he used. Did he used a flash or a continuous light? And any reflectors, perhaps?







      black-and-white still-life monochrome





      share












      share










      share



      share










      asked 8 hours ago









      anta40anta40

      1443




      1443




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          I've re-thunk this since first posting ;)



          Best guess is he just used natural light, not through his kitchen window, as I initially had assumed, because he states he didn't take it to the kitchen.



          However, in the 1920s I would assume an artist would have an artist's loft*, with high, broad natural light... & a photographer would use one too, for similar reasons; that, combined with the reflected light inside the tin funnel the pepper was placed in & a 6-minute exposure, appear to have given him all he needed.



          From Wikipedia - Pepper No 30




          He first tried with plain muslin or a piece of white cardboard
          as the backdrop, but for these images he thought the contrast between
          the backdrop and the pepper was too stark. On August 3 he found a
          large tin funnel, and, placing it on its side, he set a pepper just
          inside the large open end. He wrote:



          "It was a bright idea, a perfect relief for the pepper and adding
          reflecting light to important contours. I still had the pepper which
          caused me a week's work, I had decided I could go no further with it,
          yet something kept me from taking it to the kitchen, the end of all
          good peppers. I placed it in the funnel, focused with the Zeiss, and
          knowing just the viewpoint, recognizing a perfect light, made an
          exposure of six minutes, with but a few moments' preliminary work, the
          real preliminary was on in hours passed. I have a great negative, ‒ by
          far the best!"



          By placing the pepper in the opening of the funnel, Weston was able to
          light it in a way that portrays the pepper in three dimensions, rather
          than as a flat image. It is this light that gives the image much of
          its extraordinary quality.




          One thing about still life, which I do a lot of myself, is it never gets bored.

          It leaves you to do all the thinking. It doesn't shuffle its feet or want a cup of tea, & blur your image if it has to hang a round a while. A flower stalk wilting slightly over a focus stack taking 5 minutes is about the worst you'll have to deal with.



          *There is an entire row of these houses near where I used to work in London, all designed North-facing but with huge windows to admit lots of broad, indirect light. It's known colloquially as Artist's Row, in Chiswick, West London..



          Pic, Credit:© Philip Ide Photography



          enter image description here



          I also found a newspaper article in the Daily Mail with pictures of the interior of one of them - can I have one please??






          share|improve this answer
































            0














            I believe that focusing on the lighting alone is not enough to understand the greatness of this photo.



            The position, and quality of the light and the composition are important but more so in my opinion is the knowledge and skill in relation to film, development and darkroom printing techniques.



            I believe he had a comprehensive understanding of the film so he knew how much to over-under expose it in relation to its ASA and the development times he was going to use. The point being that he must have known how to get the best possible negative ( or the negative with the dynamic range he wanted ) through exposure and development.



            Next he had much knowledge and skill in the darkroom printing process. How to properly expose the paper, what paper grade, sheen and weight to use, what chemistry to use, times and agitation, what toners if any.



            Yes you can probably come close to matching the lighting but that does not mean you can create a photo that will look like Weson's, ( or Adams or other masters ) with out knowing all of the other things one needs to know about film, development and printing.



            So to answer the question " How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30? "



            You need to spend copious amounts of time reading, learning, experimenting with films, chemistry, printing papers and techniques. You must input as much information as you can to your brain so that you understand how light behaves, How film "see's" it differently then the brain, how film captures it



            You must spend much time putting that knowledge into practice.* This photo was probably part of the process of putting his knowledge into practice in order to experiment and learn, ( that is a supposition on my part ) and is what you should do as well.



            How dev time and chemistry types effect film,( many types of films )



            How to expose different types of paper, how to develop different types of papers.



            How to achieve different affects on papers based on enlarger and lens and printing times, dogging and burning.



            How toning effects the mood of a black and white print.



            You must also know what you want to say with your photos by using light, development, and printing to affect the viewer of your photos.





            share

























            • The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

              – David Richerby
              11 mins ago











            Your Answer








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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            2














            I've re-thunk this since first posting ;)



            Best guess is he just used natural light, not through his kitchen window, as I initially had assumed, because he states he didn't take it to the kitchen.



            However, in the 1920s I would assume an artist would have an artist's loft*, with high, broad natural light... & a photographer would use one too, for similar reasons; that, combined with the reflected light inside the tin funnel the pepper was placed in & a 6-minute exposure, appear to have given him all he needed.



            From Wikipedia - Pepper No 30




            He first tried with plain muslin or a piece of white cardboard
            as the backdrop, but for these images he thought the contrast between
            the backdrop and the pepper was too stark. On August 3 he found a
            large tin funnel, and, placing it on its side, he set a pepper just
            inside the large open end. He wrote:



            "It was a bright idea, a perfect relief for the pepper and adding
            reflecting light to important contours. I still had the pepper which
            caused me a week's work, I had decided I could go no further with it,
            yet something kept me from taking it to the kitchen, the end of all
            good peppers. I placed it in the funnel, focused with the Zeiss, and
            knowing just the viewpoint, recognizing a perfect light, made an
            exposure of six minutes, with but a few moments' preliminary work, the
            real preliminary was on in hours passed. I have a great negative, ‒ by
            far the best!"



            By placing the pepper in the opening of the funnel, Weston was able to
            light it in a way that portrays the pepper in three dimensions, rather
            than as a flat image. It is this light that gives the image much of
            its extraordinary quality.




            One thing about still life, which I do a lot of myself, is it never gets bored.

            It leaves you to do all the thinking. It doesn't shuffle its feet or want a cup of tea, & blur your image if it has to hang a round a while. A flower stalk wilting slightly over a focus stack taking 5 minutes is about the worst you'll have to deal with.



            *There is an entire row of these houses near where I used to work in London, all designed North-facing but with huge windows to admit lots of broad, indirect light. It's known colloquially as Artist's Row, in Chiswick, West London..



            Pic, Credit:© Philip Ide Photography



            enter image description here



            I also found a newspaper article in the Daily Mail with pictures of the interior of one of them - can I have one please??






            share|improve this answer





























              2














              I've re-thunk this since first posting ;)



              Best guess is he just used natural light, not through his kitchen window, as I initially had assumed, because he states he didn't take it to the kitchen.



              However, in the 1920s I would assume an artist would have an artist's loft*, with high, broad natural light... & a photographer would use one too, for similar reasons; that, combined with the reflected light inside the tin funnel the pepper was placed in & a 6-minute exposure, appear to have given him all he needed.



              From Wikipedia - Pepper No 30




              He first tried with plain muslin or a piece of white cardboard
              as the backdrop, but for these images he thought the contrast between
              the backdrop and the pepper was too stark. On August 3 he found a
              large tin funnel, and, placing it on its side, he set a pepper just
              inside the large open end. He wrote:



              "It was a bright idea, a perfect relief for the pepper and adding
              reflecting light to important contours. I still had the pepper which
              caused me a week's work, I had decided I could go no further with it,
              yet something kept me from taking it to the kitchen, the end of all
              good peppers. I placed it in the funnel, focused with the Zeiss, and
              knowing just the viewpoint, recognizing a perfect light, made an
              exposure of six minutes, with but a few moments' preliminary work, the
              real preliminary was on in hours passed. I have a great negative, ‒ by
              far the best!"



              By placing the pepper in the opening of the funnel, Weston was able to
              light it in a way that portrays the pepper in three dimensions, rather
              than as a flat image. It is this light that gives the image much of
              its extraordinary quality.




              One thing about still life, which I do a lot of myself, is it never gets bored.

              It leaves you to do all the thinking. It doesn't shuffle its feet or want a cup of tea, & blur your image if it has to hang a round a while. A flower stalk wilting slightly over a focus stack taking 5 minutes is about the worst you'll have to deal with.



              *There is an entire row of these houses near where I used to work in London, all designed North-facing but with huge windows to admit lots of broad, indirect light. It's known colloquially as Artist's Row, in Chiswick, West London..



              Pic, Credit:© Philip Ide Photography



              enter image description here



              I also found a newspaper article in the Daily Mail with pictures of the interior of one of them - can I have one please??






              share|improve this answer



























                2












                2








                2







                I've re-thunk this since first posting ;)



                Best guess is he just used natural light, not through his kitchen window, as I initially had assumed, because he states he didn't take it to the kitchen.



                However, in the 1920s I would assume an artist would have an artist's loft*, with high, broad natural light... & a photographer would use one too, for similar reasons; that, combined with the reflected light inside the tin funnel the pepper was placed in & a 6-minute exposure, appear to have given him all he needed.



                From Wikipedia - Pepper No 30




                He first tried with plain muslin or a piece of white cardboard
                as the backdrop, but for these images he thought the contrast between
                the backdrop and the pepper was too stark. On August 3 he found a
                large tin funnel, and, placing it on its side, he set a pepper just
                inside the large open end. He wrote:



                "It was a bright idea, a perfect relief for the pepper and adding
                reflecting light to important contours. I still had the pepper which
                caused me a week's work, I had decided I could go no further with it,
                yet something kept me from taking it to the kitchen, the end of all
                good peppers. I placed it in the funnel, focused with the Zeiss, and
                knowing just the viewpoint, recognizing a perfect light, made an
                exposure of six minutes, with but a few moments' preliminary work, the
                real preliminary was on in hours passed. I have a great negative, ‒ by
                far the best!"



                By placing the pepper in the opening of the funnel, Weston was able to
                light it in a way that portrays the pepper in three dimensions, rather
                than as a flat image. It is this light that gives the image much of
                its extraordinary quality.




                One thing about still life, which I do a lot of myself, is it never gets bored.

                It leaves you to do all the thinking. It doesn't shuffle its feet or want a cup of tea, & blur your image if it has to hang a round a while. A flower stalk wilting slightly over a focus stack taking 5 minutes is about the worst you'll have to deal with.



                *There is an entire row of these houses near where I used to work in London, all designed North-facing but with huge windows to admit lots of broad, indirect light. It's known colloquially as Artist's Row, in Chiswick, West London..



                Pic, Credit:© Philip Ide Photography



                enter image description here



                I also found a newspaper article in the Daily Mail with pictures of the interior of one of them - can I have one please??






                share|improve this answer















                I've re-thunk this since first posting ;)



                Best guess is he just used natural light, not through his kitchen window, as I initially had assumed, because he states he didn't take it to the kitchen.



                However, in the 1920s I would assume an artist would have an artist's loft*, with high, broad natural light... & a photographer would use one too, for similar reasons; that, combined with the reflected light inside the tin funnel the pepper was placed in & a 6-minute exposure, appear to have given him all he needed.



                From Wikipedia - Pepper No 30




                He first tried with plain muslin or a piece of white cardboard
                as the backdrop, but for these images he thought the contrast between
                the backdrop and the pepper was too stark. On August 3 he found a
                large tin funnel, and, placing it on its side, he set a pepper just
                inside the large open end. He wrote:



                "It was a bright idea, a perfect relief for the pepper and adding
                reflecting light to important contours. I still had the pepper which
                caused me a week's work, I had decided I could go no further with it,
                yet something kept me from taking it to the kitchen, the end of all
                good peppers. I placed it in the funnel, focused with the Zeiss, and
                knowing just the viewpoint, recognizing a perfect light, made an
                exposure of six minutes, with but a few moments' preliminary work, the
                real preliminary was on in hours passed. I have a great negative, ‒ by
                far the best!"



                By placing the pepper in the opening of the funnel, Weston was able to
                light it in a way that portrays the pepper in three dimensions, rather
                than as a flat image. It is this light that gives the image much of
                its extraordinary quality.




                One thing about still life, which I do a lot of myself, is it never gets bored.

                It leaves you to do all the thinking. It doesn't shuffle its feet or want a cup of tea, & blur your image if it has to hang a round a while. A flower stalk wilting slightly over a focus stack taking 5 minutes is about the worst you'll have to deal with.



                *There is an entire row of these houses near where I used to work in London, all designed North-facing but with huge windows to admit lots of broad, indirect light. It's known colloquially as Artist's Row, in Chiswick, West London..



                Pic, Credit:© Philip Ide Photography



                enter image description here



                I also found a newspaper article in the Daily Mail with pictures of the interior of one of them - can I have one please??







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 4 hours ago

























                answered 8 hours ago









                TetsujinTetsujin

                8,08821948




                8,08821948























                    0














                    I believe that focusing on the lighting alone is not enough to understand the greatness of this photo.



                    The position, and quality of the light and the composition are important but more so in my opinion is the knowledge and skill in relation to film, development and darkroom printing techniques.



                    I believe he had a comprehensive understanding of the film so he knew how much to over-under expose it in relation to its ASA and the development times he was going to use. The point being that he must have known how to get the best possible negative ( or the negative with the dynamic range he wanted ) through exposure and development.



                    Next he had much knowledge and skill in the darkroom printing process. How to properly expose the paper, what paper grade, sheen and weight to use, what chemistry to use, times and agitation, what toners if any.



                    Yes you can probably come close to matching the lighting but that does not mean you can create a photo that will look like Weson's, ( or Adams or other masters ) with out knowing all of the other things one needs to know about film, development and printing.



                    So to answer the question " How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30? "



                    You need to spend copious amounts of time reading, learning, experimenting with films, chemistry, printing papers and techniques. You must input as much information as you can to your brain so that you understand how light behaves, How film "see's" it differently then the brain, how film captures it



                    You must spend much time putting that knowledge into practice.* This photo was probably part of the process of putting his knowledge into practice in order to experiment and learn, ( that is a supposition on my part ) and is what you should do as well.



                    How dev time and chemistry types effect film,( many types of films )



                    How to expose different types of paper, how to develop different types of papers.



                    How to achieve different affects on papers based on enlarger and lens and printing times, dogging and burning.



                    How toning effects the mood of a black and white print.



                    You must also know what you want to say with your photos by using light, development, and printing to affect the viewer of your photos.





                    share

























                    • The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

                      – David Richerby
                      11 mins ago















                    0














                    I believe that focusing on the lighting alone is not enough to understand the greatness of this photo.



                    The position, and quality of the light and the composition are important but more so in my opinion is the knowledge and skill in relation to film, development and darkroom printing techniques.



                    I believe he had a comprehensive understanding of the film so he knew how much to over-under expose it in relation to its ASA and the development times he was going to use. The point being that he must have known how to get the best possible negative ( or the negative with the dynamic range he wanted ) through exposure and development.



                    Next he had much knowledge and skill in the darkroom printing process. How to properly expose the paper, what paper grade, sheen and weight to use, what chemistry to use, times and agitation, what toners if any.



                    Yes you can probably come close to matching the lighting but that does not mean you can create a photo that will look like Weson's, ( or Adams or other masters ) with out knowing all of the other things one needs to know about film, development and printing.



                    So to answer the question " How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30? "



                    You need to spend copious amounts of time reading, learning, experimenting with films, chemistry, printing papers and techniques. You must input as much information as you can to your brain so that you understand how light behaves, How film "see's" it differently then the brain, how film captures it



                    You must spend much time putting that knowledge into practice.* This photo was probably part of the process of putting his knowledge into practice in order to experiment and learn, ( that is a supposition on my part ) and is what you should do as well.



                    How dev time and chemistry types effect film,( many types of films )



                    How to expose different types of paper, how to develop different types of papers.



                    How to achieve different affects on papers based on enlarger and lens and printing times, dogging and burning.



                    How toning effects the mood of a black and white print.



                    You must also know what you want to say with your photos by using light, development, and printing to affect the viewer of your photos.





                    share

























                    • The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

                      – David Richerby
                      11 mins ago













                    0












                    0








                    0







                    I believe that focusing on the lighting alone is not enough to understand the greatness of this photo.



                    The position, and quality of the light and the composition are important but more so in my opinion is the knowledge and skill in relation to film, development and darkroom printing techniques.



                    I believe he had a comprehensive understanding of the film so he knew how much to over-under expose it in relation to its ASA and the development times he was going to use. The point being that he must have known how to get the best possible negative ( or the negative with the dynamic range he wanted ) through exposure and development.



                    Next he had much knowledge and skill in the darkroom printing process. How to properly expose the paper, what paper grade, sheen and weight to use, what chemistry to use, times and agitation, what toners if any.



                    Yes you can probably come close to matching the lighting but that does not mean you can create a photo that will look like Weson's, ( or Adams or other masters ) with out knowing all of the other things one needs to know about film, development and printing.



                    So to answer the question " How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30? "



                    You need to spend copious amounts of time reading, learning, experimenting with films, chemistry, printing papers and techniques. You must input as much information as you can to your brain so that you understand how light behaves, How film "see's" it differently then the brain, how film captures it



                    You must spend much time putting that knowledge into practice.* This photo was probably part of the process of putting his knowledge into practice in order to experiment and learn, ( that is a supposition on my part ) and is what you should do as well.



                    How dev time and chemistry types effect film,( many types of films )



                    How to expose different types of paper, how to develop different types of papers.



                    How to achieve different affects on papers based on enlarger and lens and printing times, dogging and burning.



                    How toning effects the mood of a black and white print.



                    You must also know what you want to say with your photos by using light, development, and printing to affect the viewer of your photos.





                    share















                    I believe that focusing on the lighting alone is not enough to understand the greatness of this photo.



                    The position, and quality of the light and the composition are important but more so in my opinion is the knowledge and skill in relation to film, development and darkroom printing techniques.



                    I believe he had a comprehensive understanding of the film so he knew how much to over-under expose it in relation to its ASA and the development times he was going to use. The point being that he must have known how to get the best possible negative ( or the negative with the dynamic range he wanted ) through exposure and development.



                    Next he had much knowledge and skill in the darkroom printing process. How to properly expose the paper, what paper grade, sheen and weight to use, what chemistry to use, times and agitation, what toners if any.



                    Yes you can probably come close to matching the lighting but that does not mean you can create a photo that will look like Weson's, ( or Adams or other masters ) with out knowing all of the other things one needs to know about film, development and printing.



                    So to answer the question " How to re-create Edward Weson's Pepper No. 30? "



                    You need to spend copious amounts of time reading, learning, experimenting with films, chemistry, printing papers and techniques. You must input as much information as you can to your brain so that you understand how light behaves, How film "see's" it differently then the brain, how film captures it



                    You must spend much time putting that knowledge into practice.* This photo was probably part of the process of putting his knowledge into practice in order to experiment and learn, ( that is a supposition on my part ) and is what you should do as well.



                    How dev time and chemistry types effect film,( many types of films )



                    How to expose different types of paper, how to develop different types of papers.



                    How to achieve different affects on papers based on enlarger and lens and printing times, dogging and burning.



                    How toning effects the mood of a black and white print.



                    You must also know what you want to say with your photos by using light, development, and printing to affect the viewer of your photos.






                    share













                    share


                    share








                    edited 29 mins ago

























                    answered 54 mins ago









                    Alaska manAlaska man

                    1,548410




                    1,548410












                    • The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

                      – David Richerby
                      11 mins ago

















                    • The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

                      – David Richerby
                      11 mins ago
















                    The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

                    – David Richerby
                    11 mins ago





                    The asker is probably shooting digital, so I'm not sure this really helps.

                    – David Richerby
                    11 mins ago

















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