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 Location:  Home » Wildlife Books » Adams, Ansel » Examples: Making of Forty Photographs  
Examples: Making of Forty Photographs
Examples: Making of Forty Photographs

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Author: Ansel Adams
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Category: Book

Buy New: £12.84



New (24) Used (8) from £6.58

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 37518

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 180
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.1
Dimensions (in): 10.4 x 9 x 0.6

ISBN: 082121750X
Dewey Decimal Number: 770.924
EAN: 9780821217504
ASIN: 082121750X

Publication Date: June 15, 1989
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: DISPATCHED FROM USA. NOT DISPATCHED FROM UNITED KINGDOM. Please allow 10-14 working days for delivery . Code: H20080425011458T

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Examples: Making of Forty Photographs

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Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A charming insight into the soul of a great photographer   April 27, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

There are many great books about photography, of which this is just one, but there are relatively few books about how to be a great photographer. On the latter topic this book is exceptional.

Ansel Adams was clearly both a gentleman and a gentle man, who lived to create great images for the pleasure and education of others. We are exceptionally lucky that he left us both his wonderful pictures, but also a few books which explain not only how, but also why some of them were created.

This book covers a photography career of over 60 years, taking 40 of his greatest pictures, and describing how they were made. Although much of the technical advice is still valid today, a lot of it requires on the fly translation from the language of large format cameras and glass plates to the world of digital SLRs, with tiny sensors and vast memory cards. That exercise might put some people off, but it makes you think harder about his advice, and that's a good thing.

However, where this book really scores is with the human stories of how and why Adams made certain pictures. Two examples stick in my mind.
Firstly, how one of his iconic views of Yosemite was made after a day's hard hiking with a full size view camera, large wooden tripod, and just twelve glass plates. He suspected that he had wasted the first eleven, and had just one left for a favourite view of Half Dome. He took extra care with that one, and the results are still thrilling 80 years on.

Then there's his tale of photographing 50s Californian farming families. This is a charming insight into how a great photographer of people develops both trust and ideas, lubricating both with an appropriate supply of beer. You suspect these days were not so hard for Adams as the great Yosemite hikes.

"Examples" also contains some remarkable philosophical insights into the process and role of photography. The one which now sticks foremost in my mind is that enthusiasm for a subject will not create great photographs - you have to visualise the image and its impact mentally, then make it. This is perhaps the single most powerful piece of advice in the book.

In 1935 Adams was concerned that the advent of 35mm would result in a vast number of bad photographs. Yet he was keen on the new medium, because he could also see its benefits. The same page could be written ten times over about digital photography, but you know that had Adams lived a little longer he would have been a keen PhotoShop-er.

This is a good book on photographic technique, but there are others. But there are few books which give such an insight into the soul of a great photographer.



5 out of 5 stars How Did You Make That Photograph, Mr. Adams?   May 15, 2004
 27 out of 28 found this review helpful

An essential book for all photography fans!

In 1983, Ansel Adams picked 40 of his most memorable and diverse black and white photographs as examples of his work. For each one he wrote a brief essay that described the circumstances of deciding to photograph the subject, how he came to prepare for the photography, his companions, special challenges that occurred along the way, how he selected the composition, tricky light and shadow conditions encountered, technical details of how the image was captured (equipment, film speeds, settings, filters, lenses, etc.), technical details of printing the image, and the surprises he experienced.

In the midst of all this, he shares his philosophy of life, nature, and the art of photography. It's like attending a master class with a genius. Even if you know nothing about photography, this book will open your eyes to new ways of seeing and experiencing the world around you.

For those who love these images, the stories that accompany them will broaden and deepen your appreciation of what Mr. Adams accomplished. If you are not a technically-oriented photographer or fan, realize that only about 20 percent of the material is primarily technical. The technical parts are very interesting, but the rest of the material is even better.

Mr. Adams did draw the line at one point though. "Absent from these pages [is] a statement of what the photograph 'means.'" His reason: "Only the print contains the artist's meaning and message." In other words, the work should speak to you for itself.

He does point out some limits to his essays that you should keep in mind. He often doesn't remember when he made a particular photograph. Friends would remind him that a certain print was published in a certain publication in 1934 and he had dated it as 1936 elsewhere. He also did not keep notes of how he made the image after the negative was developed. So all of the technical notes and dates are probably off a little. That's all right in many cases. You are not a historian, and you are probably not going to use glass plates. Modern equipment is much different from what Adams used, so you will be making major adjustments anyway.

His style of photography was one adventure after another. You'll be climbing with him through snow-clad forests in freezing weather, and suddenly he's down to his last exposure. Which filter should he use?

In fact, in many cases, Adams was gambling on how the image would turn out because he would not get a second chance. It's like reading a detective story, in which the story begins with a flashback sequence of how the mystery ends, like Sunset Boulevard, because the finished image is there is its duotone beauty.

In other cases, the experiences of Edward Weston helped him avoid mistakes. As a result, you get to see his delightful, dramatic images of dunes in Death Valley.

As usual, the Little, Brown pages are often too small for the images. Despite my annoyance at this limitation, I did not grade the book down since the essays are so wonderful (of more than five-star interest) and are the real reason for reading and examining this book.

I would suggest that you read The American Wilderness before reading this book. That will give you a context for understanding what Mr. Adams is talking about in these essays. The essays assume a certain level of familiarity with the people, philosophies, and locations involved. The American Wilderness can provide that background for you.

After you have swum in these wonderful stories, I suggest that you write an essay about something you have done that contains high drama and meaning. Then share that essay with someone who would appreciate know the whole story. How can others learn as rapidly and as well as possible if your experiences (successful and unsuccessful) are lost?

Keep your mind open for opportunity! It's all around you!


5 out of 5 stars Great book   January 16, 2004
 4 out of 8 found this review helpful

Ansel is a miracle worker. His pictures are some of the best you will see and in this great book he talks through his techniques and ideas behind some of his greatest pictures.

The one shame is that he talks about a project he was embarking on which he never finished due to his death.

Anyway an inspiring book and a must read for Photographers.


5 out of 5 stars Superb and essential   February 1, 2003
 21 out of 22 found this review helpful

Ansel Adams is still the technical exemplar of ultra-realist monochrome film-based photography. His style, and above all his technique, has a great deal to teach us today, whether we're using the same silver processes as the f/64 group, or modern digital cameras.

As a book, I find this more readable than his Camera / Negative / Print trilogy. Although the keen student ought to read all four, the way in which this book examines the whole life cycle of each finished print is more accessible as an entry point to his approach.

As a coffee table book, there are better collections of Adams' work. This is primarly a text for those who want to improve their own photography.

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