'twas Hip to be Square
I think it still is!
Andrew in Window - © John Neel - w/ Hasselblad
There was a time when it was hip to be a square format photographer. The square format was a wonderful way to make photographs.
© John Neel - The images here are Not to be copied downloaded or used for any purpose.
There are many things that the younger generation of photographers may never know or appreciate about film cameras. At least for some of us, digital has changed the things we loved about film formats. Now it seems that everyone has similar looking images, all of the pictures are the same 3:2 or 4:3 aspect ratio and the cameras are way to complex. They try to do it all and the printing is all the same. Digital has made everything more uniform, overly precise, technically more complicated and in many ways less photographic.
I have always loved the square format.
Many of the greatest photographers in this world used this beautiful format to create their amazing imagery. Photographers such as Diane Arbus, Emitt Gowen, Lee Friedlander, Harry Callahan, Irving Penn were all masters of the square and without them knowing it they were mentors for many others through their work. I am sure that their photographs would not be the same if they had used modern digital framing. I am sure that we would have great images from them but they would not be the same as the ones they produced with 6x6.
Very different in the way it sees the world, the aspect ratio of 1:1 requires a slightly different compositional approach to make the images work. Many find this format limiting and static because it is more difficult to create using conventional proportions. Normal balance and compositional rules seem to fly out the window. But this is a welcomed challenge for the users of this format. When it works, it is amazing. In the wrong hands it can be disastrous. In the right hands with a well trained and creative eye the square composition can't fail.
Due to a preference by many for a rectangular composition, most photographers used the square format to capture their subjects only to crop the images to a rectangle in the darkroom. The square for them allowed for some wiggle room so to speak. These users thought that because they were using a large negative, they had the resolution to allow them to crop later. Professionals relied on the square to allow them to crop to the aspect best suited for layout in magazines and catalogs. It was an actual selling point for square format.
Today, you can have a medium format square sensor digital camera if you have a ton of money. Kodak and other manufacturers have been making them for some time. They are very expensive, and as such there are not many users. Larger sensors are expensive to make in part because there is a smaller user base. That may change as digital photographers learn the nuances of aspect ratios and demand sensors of different proportions.
My wonderful little Olympus EP1 allows me to shoot a square format as viewed on the view-screen, but produces a rectangular image that I have to crop in the computer. Once cropped, I end up with a smaller file size. This is not the same experience as shooting and seeing a square. But at least this manufacturer understands the desire for square images and provides me with a shooting option.
I always shot for the full frame of whatever format I was using. I still do that to this day. Digital only has so many pixels. Why throw any of them away? If square, shoot square and if rectangular shoot rectangular. To prove a point during the older days of 35 mm and 120 film photography, many photographers would print the black film border to indicate that they had used the full frame and that they had done all of the composition within the camera. The computer forced frames we see in many of todays digital images originated from this idea. Nothing is new but many things are newly faked using the computer.
Usually produced on 120 film, there was an abundance of 6x6 centimeter or 4x4 centimeter cameras that dominated during a large portion of the film era. Cameras from Zeiss,Voigtlander, Agfa, Ansco, Kodak, Rollei, Mamiya, Yashica and others were the mainstay of medium format high end and professional photographic gear throughout the twentieth century. During the 50's and sixties, there were many cameras that produced square images. The Instamatic square format film cameras from Kodak and Agfa transformed the color snapshots taken by millions of users throughout the world. The Polaroid SX70 made square photography instantly gratifying. There have been Large format cameras that were built to produce square negatives using square film holders. In the 1950's there were at least a few excellent 35 mm cameras that produced a square negative/positive. One of those was the Zeiss-Tenax which is still sought after by collectors and users.
Today, cameras such as the Holga, the Diana make fun use of the square format. Lomography has made a great market out of fun plastic cameras made in China that play off of unique capabilities such as multiple lenses, fisheye and square format. Many of the users think of the square as an artistic format, especially when using it for the soft focus that these particular simple cameras produce.
A very popular and fairly recent app or application for the Apple iPhone is called Hipstamatic which simulates the full frame output of a simple camera such as the Diana. In these cameras and apps, people are finding fun and creative ways to play with very dreamy soft images that are different from the run-of-the-mill rectangular images we have all become accustomed to seeing. friends share these images on Facebook and social media while having a coffee at a Starbucks.
For a few obvious reasons the square is a shape that is great for circular subjects as well as subjects that are symmetrical. Portraits have for me been wonderful subjects for the square. The square can give many subjects a feeling of stature and grace.
I would hope that very soon, there might be a digital camera that is produced to mimic the wonderful capabilities of the 1:1 format that many of us have grown to love, but few today are not even aware. It would be even better if it had the same characteristic look and feel of our trusted old Hasselblads and Rollei's or our wonderful vintage Mamiya, Bronica or Yashica cameras. Simple, square and digital.
Wonderful!
© John Neel - The images in the gallery and within my posts are Not to be copied, downloaded or used for any purpose.
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Comments
Yup, I'm very much a fan of square. My first foray into MF was a Lubitel 166B and I followed it with a Rollei 6006, Bronica SQa and Hasselblad 500C/M: all square. I'd say composing for square is quite a *radical* difference from any rectangular format.
These days, I can equal or exceed the image-quality off my hasselblad, by stitching 3 dSLR images together (both in terms of number of pixels and their sharpness - and, with a little thought, I can even emulate the narrower DoF as well in the process) and I don't have to spend 3 hours waiting for the film to dry while the stench of fixer lingers. Heck, if I want it to look like film, I'll run it through DxO to emulate a specific tonality and grain.
But for all that, I think you have to use square to know it's an option, in order to *see* scenes that will work in a square frame. I might not shoot square film again - certainly not in a hurry - but I'm a better photographer for having had the experience.
Incidentally, another angle to consider: 6x6 has the shift movements of 645 built-in, and square makes optimum use of the lens's image-circle coverage - no wastage.
I never had the pleasure of owning a square format camera, but I like the look. While we're waiting for the digital dream camera you long for, though, I wonder why someone like Hoodman doesn't provide an adapter for the viewfinder that blacks out the left and right sides. With one of the 18 megapixel cameras, you could easily crop out 6 mp and have a 12 mp image as a useable square. At least we could practice the compositional techniques required for this format.
Besides my love for my film cameras that use square format, I wrote this in hopes that someone will look at the idea of a small waist level square format digital camera that does not cost an arm and a leg. I think that there are those who want the total experience of shooting square.
You can mask the view screen with a thin piece of black paper or board. The problem is that the image will be recorded as a rectangle using the full frame. However as with my Olympus, you can at least frame the shots you take. Remembering where to crop later shouldn't be a real problem. The most important part is actually experiencing the composition during the shooting.
It's not that expensive to buy a quality second hand Twin-Lens Reflex camera these days; it would be nice to see some more folks of the digital generation pick one, get some Ektar 100, or a black and white film like XP2 (which can be developed anywhere C-41 processing is available), and experience the magic.
I got a Rolleicord Vb a couple of weeks back and just love it! :-)
It is magic! Old camera mechanics with film are wonderfully tangible imaging machines. I believe they are still magical and can give us the edge on much of the new just because they are different. I believe in the magic that is analog. Digital can have it as well but somehow there is a difference that many of us sense. The square is a lovely slice of that magic.
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