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Showing posts with the label Graflex Super D

Helmut Newton

  Helmut Newton (1920–2004) was a German-Australian photographer whose provocative, cinematic imagery—often erotic, stylized, and framed in urban or hotel settings—became iconic in fashion and portrait photography. His work appeared extensively in Vogue and Elle , and he was celebrated for images that blended scripted glamour with moments of candid surprise. Camera Gear & Toolkit An Equipped Minimalist Newton famously kept his kit small yet versatile: Four camera bodies , five lenses , a strobe, and a Polaroid camera—all fitting in one bag under 40 lbs . This minimalist setup enabled him to work anywhere with ease . Over his career, he experimented with a variety of systems including a 4×5 Graflex Super D , Rolleiflex TLR , Nikon , Canon , Pentax , Olympus , Instamatic , and even point‑and‑shoot compacts like the Stylus Epic —often choosing whichever tools suited the situation best . Graflex Super D Helmut Newton and camera He is seen on a number of pictures using a ...

Elliott Erwitt

  Here’s a structured profile of Elliott Erwitt —focusing on his photographic vision, iconic work, and the cameras that helped him document life with wit and humanity: Elliott Erwitt: Master of Life’s Subtle Ironies — and the Cameras He Trusted Elliott Erwitt (1928–2023) was a legendary Magnum photographer celebrated for capturing candid moments full of humor, compassion, and uncanny visual wit. His images—whether of dogs, famous personalities, or everyday urban vignettes—convey candid truth through simplicity and timing. Visual Style & Biography Born in Paris to Russian émigrés and raised in Italy and the U.S., Erwitt developed an early sensitivity to cultural nuance and irony. After studying photography and filmmaking, he joined Magnum Photos in 1953 and went on to produce iconic images of children, dogs, world leaders, celebrities, and intrusions of absurdity into daily life . His signature lies in the surprising conjunction: a pair of boots beside a tiny dog, a couple ki...

Dorothea Lange

  Dorothea Lange, best known for her iconic work during the Great Depression—especially Migrant Mother —used a range of medium and large format cameras throughout her career. Her gear choices reflected her commitment to image quality and the storytelling demands of documentary photography. Cameras Dorothea Lange Used 1. Graflex Super D Type: Large format SLR (4x5 inches) Use: She used this for many of her best-known portraits, including Migrant Mother . Why: It allowed for large negatives, offering exceptional detail and tonal range—ideal for the kind of deeply human, textured work she did. Graflex Super D 2. Graflex Series D Earlier version of the Super D. These cameras had a mirror and focusing screen similar to an SLR, which helped with composition even in the field. Graflex Series D 3. Leica Rangefinder (later years) She used a Leica 35mm rangefinder during some of her work abroad, especially post-WWII when she documented international stories. Why: Smal...