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  #1  
Old 12th January 2020, 09:19 PM
Nat Polton Nat Polton is offline
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Default Adams Books.

Are the Adams books The Camera, The Negative, and The Print worth buying?
Are they for the beginner, intermediate or advanced photographer?

I have seen a few references to them but never actually seen a printed copy of one.


Cheers folks.
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Old 12th January 2020, 11:47 PM
Lostlabours Lostlabours is offline
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They are fine for anyone regardless of experience. The Camera is the least essential but worth having to complete the set. If just one then The Negative.

I assume you'll buy second hand so get all 3

Ian
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Old 12th January 2020, 11:54 PM
Mike O'Pray Mike O'Pray is offline
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I have the Negative and the Print. Of the two the negative is IMO by far the better of the two in terms of what it says about film exposure and developing. It just seems more relevant. More to be gained

Mike
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Old 13th January 2020, 08:09 AM
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They are fine books but perhaps a little out-dated materials wise so for that reason I would recommend 'way beyond monochrome' first. They come in different editions.
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Old 13th January 2020, 09:44 AM
mpirie mpirie is online now
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I have all three, The Camera, The Negative and The Print.

As Ian mentions, The Negative is the most important and informative one. I've read The Negative several times from cover to cover, as it goes into depth for testing and Zone System. The Camera and The Print i'll dip in and out of depending on what's rattling around in the space between my ears.

Some of the information is a little outdated as Marty says, due to Adams' materials being different to what's available to us now......especially emulsion types and thicknesses as well as chemicals.

I would suggest they are for the intermediate to experienced photographer looking to understand what goes on.

Mike
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Old 13th January 2020, 10:43 AM
Nat Polton Nat Polton is offline
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Thank you gents.
Next stop will be ABEBOOKS UK and EBAY.

Trouble with ebay is that once I start looking there, an hour can fly by looking at all the other stuff that I have managed to do without all my life, but just might come in handy one day.

Adams it is. Thank you all.
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Old 13th January 2020, 10:52 AM
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I have all three Adam’s books and found them invaluable. However since Way Beyond Monochrome second edition was released I now use that as it is more up to date and encapsulates all the Adam’s information in one volume. Another alternative is the Fred Picker Zone VI Workshop. Same information slimmer volume but presented in Fred’s own style which tends towards “This is my way and is the ONLY way”.
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Old 20th January 2020, 04:21 PM
KeithM KeithM is offline
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I concur re The Negative. If the man himself plus his work are of interest, I recommend 'Ansel Adams - An Autobiography' and 'The Portfolios of Ansel Adams' (with introduction by John Szarkowski).
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Old 21st January 2020, 06:47 PM
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I adore the clarity of his wirting in the three books and I would still recommend them to everyone. As a modern update (plus something more about finding your own creative approach) Bruce Barnbaum's "The art of photography" is also very good.
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Old 22nd January 2020, 04:04 PM
JimW JimW is offline
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Quote:
Bruce Barnbaum's "The art of photography" is also very good.
+1 from me. I read this one several times, and if memory serves what really stuck was the quote 'of what use are lens and light, to those who lack in mind and sight?' Puts the gear debate into context... YMMV.
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