Campus News

In the summer, you’re likely to find Mike Darlow, an instructor in the Heavy Equipment Apprenticeship program, working on vintage and hot rod cars. That was especially true this summer, when his love for travel to Europe was curtailed by COVID.

photo of man wearing a camera around his neck, leaning on graffiti covered wall
Mike Darlow is shown with his Mamiya 7 camera around his neck. This photo was taken by Mike's friend and fellow photography hobbyist Peter Kwan.

But with the days getting shorter, this Lethbridge College-trained, Red Seal journeyman heavy equipment technician turns his attention to another passion — photography.

“In summer, everything is so bright,” he says. “The light is so harsh. So you have to go out in the golden hour of morning or night, and I’ll be honest, I don’t like to be up at like five in the morning and I don’t want to still be in the mountains at 10 at night. The days are shorter in winter and even if it’s overcast, the light is flat but it’s easier to control your exposure.”

For Mike, photography is all about the artistry and mastery of the technical aspects of the camera, lens, film and developing process to evoke a feeling – be it nostalgia, awe or mystery.

“What’s amazing about photography is all you need is a box and some film behind it,” he explains, “and to understand the theory of photography.”

Two photographers standing at the same location can take a photo at the same time yet come away with very different images. It’s all about the choices they make.

Mike’s choices are myriad. He has a collection of camera bodies from modern, mirrorless digital to 35 mm, medium- and large-format film cameras spanning the past century. There’s a Mamiya 7 from Japan, and a couple of Leicas, including a 1950s M3, one of the company’s best-sellers. There’s a 2010 large-format box camera that would look at home in the late 1800s, and a Zeiss Ikoflex Clio from 1930s. His “oddball” is a Sigma Merrell digital camera that takes amazing landscapes from a small, awkward-to-hold body.

He also has an extensive collection of lenses, the oldest of which is an 1861 German-made Voightlander. With his mechanical know-how, he’s adapted lenses to mount on camera bodies they were never built for. "You’ve just got to make your own brackets and rig it up,” he says.

The photographer can make even more choices, such as the type of film – maybe even motion picture film adapted to fit a still camera, giving images a bluish-pink tone.

Black and white photo of a vintage truck in the sun
The truck was a summer project Mike Darlow worked on. He took this photo on 4x5 large format camera on Ilford Delta 100 film.

Before taking a photo, Mike has in mind the look he’s trying to achieve. He thinks through every detail, calculating the interplay of time and light. It can be such a time-consuming process that his two daughters grew weary of sitting for portraits. In Mike’s seventh year of teaching a Lethbridge College, his children have both joined him at LC. Eldest daughter Annabelle was an internationally competitive judoka who’s now enrolled in the college’s Exercise Science program. Daughter Isabelle is an artist enrolled in her first year in the college’s Multimedia Production Program. An impressive display of her work adorns Mike’s office in the Trades building.

His work is precise and takes time. When Mike is shooting, you won’t hear the sound of the rapid shutter clicking; from a full-day’s outing, he might emerge with just 10 shots. Even after he takes a photo, choices remain. Mike exerts more artistic influence through the selections he makes processing the film in his basement darkroom.

“I can take as good a picture with a box camera and my lens from the 1980s as the most modern digital cameras today.”

His Flickr account is filled with stunning landscapes and portraits, and, of course, pictures of cars.

His interest in photography came from his father, who shot on Kodachrome film during his extensive travels in the 1960s. Mike’s dad gave him his first camera, a point-and-shoot Fuji in 1983, and later his first manual film camera, a used 1970s Nikon.

Mike leapt into digital photography in the 2000s, but he missed film, and he wisely scooped up used film cameras as photographers abandoned them for new technology. Today, the cameras he picked up on the cheap are highly sought and valued by a next generation of shooters who’ve fallen for film.

He learned the craft through years of experimentation and a lot of trial and error, as well as through outings with friends who are proficient photographers, too, each with a unique style.

“I'm a technical geek,” he says. “I just like technical things.”

With winter coming, and likely continued calls for families to limit their social contacts, photography can be an inexpensive option for people of any age. Here’s Mike’s advice for getting started:

  1. If you can afford one, buy a digital mirrorless camera “because it’s the modern thing.” Put it in fully manual mode. Do not shoot in automatic. “Take your time and learn.”
  2. There is a photography club in Lethbridge, but you can also just go out with friends willing to explore photography, too. You’ll be amazed by how your group can visit the same places and come back with completely unique photos.
  3. You can also start out using the camera on your phone to understand the relationship between aperture (light) and shutter speed (time). Some phone cameras have a manual option.
  4. To get into film, invest $100 in a used Pentax film camera and start shooting. Phone apps like Light Meter Wheel and Reciprocity Timer can help with your exposure settings. One of Mike’s photos was taken on film at night using settings he determined using a phone app.

Not ready to start shooting yet but interested in photography?

  • Visit Mike’s favourite YouTube channel on photography, Negative Feedback. A young photographer shoots with new and vintage gear and compares results.
  • Watch Kodachrome, a 2017 film starring Ed Harris and Jason Sudeikis now on Netflix. It’s about a father-and-son road trip taking pictures on the last roll of Kodachrome film while driving to the last lab still developing it. “He makes every picture count.”

 

"Living room of an old house"
Mike Darlow took this photo in a friend’s home in France, built in the 12th century. He took the photo with a Mamiya 7, large format, 65 mm lens on Kodak Portra 400.
"Dash of a Bentley car"
This is the dash of a 1930s Bentley driven by famous race car driver Derek Bell during the 2017 Lemans classic car weekend. Mike Darlow took this photo on his Mamiya 7 camera with a 65mm lens on Kodak Portra 400.
Black and white portrait of a woman in a barbershop
Mike Darlow took this portrait in a Lethbridge barbershop using a 4x5 large format camera on Kodak Tri-x 320 with speedlights. "I love the tones on this one."