Portraits in the Snow

 

Sunday was a beautiful day here in the east of Norway. I got the chance to follow my friend on his rounds up in the woods checking his traps. The thaw is setting in and the snow is getting a little rotten in places and it’s easy to fall though to your knees. I know as I did it a few times. It’s great fun while trying not to get your Hasselblad buried in the snow, while struggling to get out of the hole you’ve made for yourself. Luckily I didn’t bury my camera and I got back to the pick-up without incident.

I’d asked my mate if he wouldn’t mind posing for me and he said we would. At Midstua where we had parked the pick-up there are two cabins. I chose the most weather beaten of the two to use as a background. There was no need for reflectors and such as my subject was surround with the reflector nature had provided for us. Luckily the sun wasn’t too bright and provided enough to light the scene without being too over powering. I set up my camera and shot off a roll of Rollei 80s (We only had time for the one)which later I developed and scanned in the same way I did with the tulip shots I posted last week here.

Here is a poor iPhone shot of the set-up.

IMG_1280

And Here’s some of the results

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Untitled (9)

Untitled (11)

 

Let me know what you think :0)

Portrait in the Snow

Untitled (9)
Portrait in the Snow, a photo by Davidap2009 on Flickr.

This shot was taken yesterday at Midstua. I was here two weeks ago with my Nikon D800. My mate invited me to join him and this time I took my Hasselblad with me This is the first shot off the roll.
Rollei 80s in Caffenol C-L using Stand development as with the tulips I did a week ago.

Gargoyle

Gargoyle

I took this shot in 2006 with a Sony digital compact. It’s been my avatar on Flickr since the first day I started there. It’s part of the decoration on the cathedral in Trondheim. It’s by one of my Favourite Sculptors. Gustav Vigeland.

Abandoned Sanatorium

WheelchairAbandoned SanatoriumTreatment AwaitsDentist's ChairThe Party's OverOn the stairs
The Furness…Fly away Peter…The Cable CarControl RoomCable Car II…the world outside my window.
The Furness IIWheelchairMonopolySaucers  & PlatesBreaking Free"…its just a small procedure"
Sanatorium Exterior

Abandoned Sanatorium, a set on Flickr.

This old sanatorium was built by St. Jorgen Foundation in Bergen. It should serve as a tuberculosis hospital for the West Coast. Most patients came from the Bergen region, but there were patients from all over the country. The sanatorium was in operation until mid 1950’s.

The background for building the sanatorium here was said to be it’s dry climate, pine forest and the thin mountain air. It was a recipe believed in the old days to cure people with tuberculosis. On this location they found a whole “package” – it was located on a hill and in a climate that one at the time considered “immune zone” against the disease.

In the year 1900, the plans for the sanataorium were ready. The three story hospital would have 96 beds and modern spa and operating room. An extension was built in 1924 and the capacity increased to 120 beds, and by 1950 it had reached 150 beds.
The construction plan in 1900 included also a separate laundry, stable and icehouse – and not least an electrically driven cable car from the steamship pier at the fjord and up to “rock shelf”. There would also be built a 6 km stretch of road with 13 bends up the hill.

The cable car and the power plant to the sanatorium are located in side buildings next to the sanatorium. Calculations showed that the large hospital facility would cost 456,000 norwegian kroner (approx. $76000 – an enormous sum in those days. Most of the money was acquired in Bergen: Bergen city guaranteed for 200,000 kroner, and wealthy citizens for 175,000 kroner. The final amount turned out to be 777,000 thousand kroner when the plant was inaugurated on 2 in November 1902.

At the opening party there were greeting telegrams from both the Swedish-Norwegian King and Queen, Parliament President Carl Werner and shipowner and later Prime Minister Johan Ludwig Mowinckel. Some years later, there was also built senior housing, two family dwellings for the stoker and the gardener, and “sister house” for nurses. there were also a separate chapel with mortuary.

The first treatment they had to offer – before the vaccine against the disease came after World War II – was partly operations – partly different cures. One of the cures they used here was making sure the patients got enough air daily. Meaning they would lay outside in their beds in both in summer and winter, well-packaged in bags of reindeer skins. They were placed under a huge canopy along the entire south wall and this canopy prevented rain and snow from entering their air spaces. Around the hospital they built a large park with roads where patients who were strong enough could exercise.

Another cure they used was known as ‘Blowing of the lungs’. This took place inside the ‘operation lodge’.
The technique comprised much of the so-called “blowing”. When tuberculosis attacked the lungs, it would eat the tissue, consume it so that it formed large cavities in the lung tissue. It was essential to close these cavities. This was done by puncturing the lung where the cavities had formed so that sick lung would collapse and the wounds would be healed exactly where the cavities formed.

Patients here was almost fat on the heavy diet and the hospital had its own pig barn where they made sure that the pigs had an extra thick blubber layer before they were slaughtered. And it was also quite common for relatives to send food and treats in abundant quantities

Every July a rich man in Bergen would send a cargo of oranges to patients and staff.

The distance down to the village, the risk of getting infected abd the fact that most patients were visitors, not locals – turned this place into a rather secrete and closed society. The sanatorium even had its own post office and therefore the people here would establish a separate social life. The whole complex was built in 1902 so that women and men were strictly separated. There were two bed suites, operation and cure rooms and separate dining rooms for each of the sexes. This separation of the sexes was kept strict up to a major rebuild that was done in 1937.

Although there were strict gender segregation indoors, it was allowed for girls and boys to come together on the romantic paths in the park, as well as in the decorated assembly hall when it was organized parties, cinema, concerts or theater.
Most of the patients here was young people, and those who were fit enough, would take part part in simple sports activities and games in the park outdoors. It was founded to concerts, and patients set up plays every New Year’s Eve and may 17.(Norways independence day) After rich shipowner and other rich people in Bergen gave the sanatorium a film apparatus in 1937, they had cinema once a week.

The sanatorium is now shut down. In the fight against tuberculosis there was a breakthrough – it happened just after 2 World War II. Then came effective vaccines against the disease, and a large part of the Norwegian population were vaccinated against tuberculosis in a few years. Thus has the foundation for the operation of the sanatorium gone. But others took over the buildings and between 1950 and 1990 it was used as a psychiatric hospital. After that, it was used as a reception center for refugees from the Balkan war.In 1994 the doors were closed and the sanatorium has been left abandoned since.

The Hunter in Winter II

The Hunter in Winter II by Davidap2009
The Hunter in Winter II, a photo by Davidap2009 on Flickr.

This a similar shot to the first in this series. This time a little closer and the branch coming in from the left. I’m not sure which I like best so I’ll let you the viewer decide. Leave a comment and let me know.

Midstua

Midstua by Davidap2009
Midstua, a photo by Davidap2009 on Flickr.

Our starting Point for yesterdays snowshoe trek

The Hunter in Winter

The Hunter

Today I have been out snowshoeing with a mate. Checking traps and generally having a fun time. I thought I’d share a shot I took .

The Salt Merchant

The Salt Merchant by Davidap2009
The Salt Merchant, a photo by Davidap2009 on Flickr.

Just to show that I do take the occasional colour shot I offer you to start one of my favourite casual portrait shots taken at a local Viking market. This wonderful Danish Gentleman was selling smoked salt.I asked if I could take his picture and this was the result. As the market is only every other year I had to wait two years to give him a print.

The Norwegian Tempo Club III

I was asked to take a couple of shots of some colleagues on one of their annual outings with the Norsk Tempo Klubb
The Tempo is a Norwegian moped from around the 60’s.
This shot (my personal favourite from this quick shoot)was taken using my 1958 Yashica-C TLR  from the same period as the mopeds (And some of the owners) What supprised me was the amount Of fine detail there is in this shot. The film I used was  Kodak T-max  100 asa which I developed in Caffenol -C with a reduced soda recipe using only 40g per litre instead of 54g. for 14mins at 20℃. The negatives were scanned on my Epson V700 using Silverfast SW.

I’m planning a page to explain for beginners how to use Caffenol. There are many fine sites on the web but this will be a basic “How I did it” article. So stay tuned