A Portrait on Velvia 50

By David Hume

I never shot Fujichrome Velvia for portraits, except, apparently, when I did.

I have absolutely no recollection of making some frames I found in a box labelled “1998. Blue Banana Lounge.” That’s the name of the restaurant. The guy is in chef’s clothes and I think the woman is front-of-house.

I’ve been down a transparency rabbit-hole for a few weeks now. I’ve rummaged through about 200 boxes of 135 mounted transparency film that I shot for a wine magazine in the 1990s. I’ve now digitised anything I think is worthwhile (about 100 frames) and ditched the rest.

Anyway, about 90% were shot on Fujichrome Sensia 100 (a consumer version of Provia 100) and the balance on Velvia 50. I would never shoot a portrait on Velvia.

So this is a mystery to me. Usually the memory comes back to me when I see the shots, but not this time. The drill was that for each edition the editor would give me a list of a few restaurants, or vineyards, or winemakers, and I would phone them up, make an appointment and do a couple of portraits and interiors. I got paid per gig, and I had to cover my own costs so I’d try to get three jobs on a roll, and make it efficient time-wise and do as many as I could on one day. I used to shoot them either before they got busy for lunch, or in the quiet time between lunch and dinner.

This roll only has two jobs on it; The Blue Banana Lounge and some night time exteriors of another restaurant.

So what happened? The best I can come up with is that I knew the Blue Banana Lounge was groovy, and I wanted to have a play. I was doing this for money, but mostly just enjoying the experience, learning, and trying to have fun. I was looking at all sorts of photography at the time and I especially recall I had a music magazine (Spin, perhaps?) with PJ Harvey on the cover, so maybe this day I was just pretending I worked for Rolling Stone. Who knows?

The shots were pretty heavily directed by me. In the main photo I’m standing on a chair and telling them to look serious. At least I’m assuming that, because in the frames leading up to that they’re smiling and those shots are pretty lame. I’m assuming I got them to go serious, thought it looked better, snapped them and then stopped. They weren’t professional models of course and I reckon I’d learned by then to  stop after I thought I’d got a decent frame and hope for the best.

Technically the shots would’ve been made over the course of about 15 minutes. I always tried to get in and out of people’s day quickly so I didn’t disturb them too much. The shots were handheld using available light. The camera was my Nikon FM2 with the motor drive attached and the lens the 35mm f2.8. I know this because at the time I only had that lens and the 105mm f2 .5.

I pretty much always used to shoot wide open for these portraits, because it was usually a struggle to get enough natural light indoors. Looking closely the sharpness of the second image is not that great, but it does not bother me. In the main shot maybe the contrast and the catchlights in the eyes make it look sharper than it really is. Neither of these two would be the ones I submitted to the editor, because I didn’t get those back, but whether or not I ever saw them in print  I have no idea.

And what then, do I now think of these? Despite the in-your-face colour and contrast I actually like them. For some reason the insouciance, the fresh faces, the dyed and spiked hair on this too-cool-for-school pair seems to suit the look of the film.

These two images have stayed with me since I rediscovered them. Perhaps they hold my attention only because they’re evidence of something I made one afternoon and yet have no recollection.

It’s nicer for me to think though, that here was an odd experiment that kind of paid off. Thanks for reading!

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About The Author

By David Hume
David Hume is an Australian visual artist and photographer, best known for work depicting the Australian landscape. He also worked as a commercial editorial photographer for over 25 years, and has held a number of photographic exhibitions. He currently exhibits both painting and photography.
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Alexander Seidler on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

The shots look Great David !
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

Cheers - thanks Alexander!

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Gary Smith on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

The in-your-face color and contrast define these shots for me.
I've never shot Velvia or ever been paid for my work so who am I to comment?
I like the second one, maybe enough to see what it looks like desaturated.
I am having a bit of a Nikon love affair these days (although not with my FE, rather with the D810 - love that OVF).
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

Hi - thanks Gary. Yes, I think I actually like the second one a bit more too. I just chose the closer one for the feature image because it had I bit more impact I thought. (Cheap of me, hey.) And I do have a bit of an eye open for a D810 I must say, as the prices are pretty good for them these days. As for knocking down the colour - never! When I found these I thought, "Hang on, that can't be Sensia..." and I popped one out of its mount and read RVP on it...

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

I had recently picked up a D700, so I had a 28-200 Nikkor lens that works great on the D810. The 810 only cost me $650 and it only had 14k shutter clicks (shutter rated for 200k). Although it is bigger/heavier than my Sony a7R3, I just love it. I'm not sure if I love it because of what I paid for it or because of the absolutely gorgeous OVF.

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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

So Gary - is the OVF better than the D700? (I've had one since new) D700s are still insanely cheap IMO. I've been digitising my slides/negs with my Df and there's a project I have coming up where o might need a bit more resolution...

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

Hi David, I don't really have the same amount of time on each but I would rate them about the same.

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Russ Rosener on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

I really like these and it's a trip back to the 1990s visual aesthetic. When I first glance at it the featured shot made me think I maybe had bought an album by these muscians back then! So I would say you got the Rolling Stone photographer vibe right. I recall selling slides for stock photography in those days. Generally you had to surrender the original and all rights to it. So much is different today.
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

Cheers Russ. I popped these up on my Insta when I first found them and a couple of people said they reminded them of an Album cover. Someone even said they thought the musicians looked familiar. Yes re the copyright, but I was fine with that. In fact the editor was a good guy and when a company wanted to use one of my images for an advertisement he put them on to me to organise the rates, which he didn't have to do. I got in the habit of keeping a couple of good ones back if I liked them in case I wanted to use them later. But like I say, I have no recollection of this shoot!

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Jeffery Luhn on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

David,
That's not really odd you don't remember the shoot. As photographers, we often recall the places we've been and the people we've encountered through a viewfinder memory. So much of my life was 'missed' because I had my camera glued to my face. When I see old photos, especially negatives, I frequently have only a vague memory of the experience. I believe that my lack of sleep during my working years plays a big part in memory loss. The good thing, which happened to you, is when we say, "Hey, that was a pretty good photo!" And your shots were good.

A fun project would be to find those people and give them a print. When my wife and I planned our visit to Greece in 2015, I dug through my old negatives and made 5x7 prints of the nearly 50 portraits I'd taken of people on Mykonos...in 1971! Mostly old people. I contacted someone at the town hall before leaving for the trip and mentioned my plan. They suggested that I bring the photos to the town office and have a photo show. We arrived early in the morning and pinned all the prints up on several cork boards. The 'show' started at noon. About 40 people showed up, and one very old person actually remembered having me pose them! What a thrill! Most everyone in the shots was dead, but their families were excited to see the photos, and even more excited to get the prints. It makes me happy to know that all over Mykonos my pictures are on the walls of white washed homes. A much better legacy than the thousands of commercial photos I took of forgettable products, boring buildings, food shots for menus, and staged shots of CEOs with fake smiles.
Keep digging in your files and posting pix!
Jeffery
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

Hi Jeffery - Your Mykonos project sounds great. I think that doing it through the town hall was a really good idea. I actually did do a bit of digging, but could find no record of The Blue Banana Lounge... I kind of like the memento mori aspect of it all though. Cheers, David.

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rup replied:

Comment posted: 11/11/2025

I couldn't help myself. A quick face search reveals that the woman in the photo is likely this person https://www.linkedin.com/in/bronny-wilson-technology/ Nothing came up for the man.

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rup on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

These have that unmistakable 90s look, even though people say don't shoot portraits on Velvia I feel like so many magazine prints from the 90s of models and people were shot on velvia or something very similar, leading to this now instantly recognizeable 90s vibe with deep colors and restrained blacks. I've actually been trying to recreate this look in my digital X-T5 camera with the velvia simulation but can't quite get it there as their simulation looks a bit too digital for me.
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

Yeah I know what you mean about Velvia simulations, and film sims generally. In theory there's no reason why they should not work, but they don't quite cut it. Part of it might be confirmation bias though - it would be interesting to do a double blind test...

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David Pauley on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

Hey David, these definitely have a nostalgic vibe -- something about the hairstyles and clothes, as well as the punchy colors. I'm assuming you used an on-camera flash for such a slow emulsion? Thanks for posting.
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

Hi David - no, these are with available light. I used to shoot all these portraits with available light and it was pretty tricky finding enough of it. I used to spend much more time looking for light in those days, and it's a good reminder to do that, because it's easy to get lazy with digital. The first story I ever did on 35mmc was about these sorts of portraits - https://www.35mmc.com/26/07/2019/environmental-portraits-on-e6-shooting-transparency-with-available-light-by-david-hume/ Cheers, David H

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David Pauley replied:

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

Hi again David, Thanks so much for your response and the link to your earlier post. I much prefer available light to strobe but am very much in the weeds when it comes to execution in lower light indoor setttings. Also color slide film and black and white seem to be different beasts in terms of where we meter... All these questions are by way of saying I'd love to read a story where you get into this kind of nitty gritty -- a master class maybe? Would be happy to serve as your collab if you're up for another David H and David P collaboration! Thanks again from NY.

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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

Sure thing, David. That sounds like fun. Initially I thought, "Well, I just bumbled my way through it, actually," But on thinking further I guess there are quite a few pieces to the puzzle that might be instructive, and a dialogue sounds like an interesting approach. Let's do it and see where it leads! Cheers.

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Ibraar Hussain on A Portrait on Velvia 50

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

I really enjoyed the writing, the boxes of slides and digging up on transparencies
The main photo has so much punch and impact - can see the feeling in the catchlights
Superb
I like velvia portraits - depending on the skin tone of course
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David Hume replied:

Comment posted: 12/11/2025

Thanks Ibraar! Cheers, David.

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