Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

By Ibraar Hussain

This is a record of a couple of trips I took back in 2007/2008. I brought along my Contax G2, 45mm Planar, 90mm Sonnar and 21mm Biogon plus a load of different films to use. Everything from Kodak E100vs, Fujichrome Provia 400X to little known Konica VX100.

Byzantium, it’s what I’ll always see this City and region as. It’s a name which invokes something in me, there seems to be a sense of wonder about the name and the time, along with tragedy and sadness as the City was sacked and looted throughout the ages, by Venetians, Crusaders and Ottoman Turks.

It’ll always be Byzantium, or at a push Constantinople as it was later renamed, in honour of Constantine The Great.

Icon of Christ Inside the Hagia Sofia- Neopan 1600

Back in 2007 I went on a 4 day visit – something I’d wanted to do for a long time. I visited again the following year. I was very eager to see it and experience it, as it is, as far as I am concerned probably the Greatest City in the World. I doubt even Rome has the history and the Greatness Byzantium had. But now it’s merely Istanbul – still beautiful and full of majesty but somewhat lessened as the years go by and the New Yorks and Londons of this world lay claim to be Great.

Inside the Hagia Sofia- Neopan 1600

Anybody with a camera should visit and sample the sights and sounds of this place.

Modern Istanbul extends on either side of The Bosphorus into Asia Minor. I never visited the Asian side, but just stayed in Sultan Ahmet which is ancient Byzantium. I visited twice; in 2007 when it was warm and sunny and then in 2008 when it was freezing cold with 2 feet of snow. Same season, different weather, and I then used different films.

Byzantium in Snow – Fuji Neopan 1600
Inside The Sulemaniye – Kodak TMZ 3200
Ablutions outside The Sultan Ahmet – Ilford Delta 3200

What a glorious sight; seeing the fabled Golden Horn on one side, The Bosporus and the Sea of Marmara, once known as the Propontis on the other, as you stand and breathe in the sea breeze, mingled with the smells of life.

it’s one place where everywhere you look you’ll see a glorious building and ancient landmarks, it being a city with layers of history; from Thracian to Byzantine, to Ottoman, with an eclectic mix of cultures and religions.

Look Right and see The Sultan Ahmet – at sunset. Fuji Reala 100
Look Left and see The Hagia Sofia- at sunset. Fuji Reala
Through the arch – Sultan Ahmet Mosque. Fuji Reala 100

It’s a delight to go into the Hagia Sofia, to look and see Arabic inscriptions and prayers with the names of God, The Prophet and his Family and Companions; then to look above and see Icons of Christ and The Apostles lit up by sun beams and shafts Holy of light.

Inside The Hagia Sofia
Fuji Superia 200
Inside The Hagia Sofia
Fuji Superia 200
Inside The Hagia Sofia
Fuji Superia 200
Roof Detail Hagia Sofia – Fuji Superia 200
Inside The Hagia Sofia
Fuji Superia 200
Inside The Hagia Sofia
Fuji Superia 200
Agfa Color 100-C
Inside The Sulemaniye
Interior Sultan Ahmet
Agfa Color 100-C
Inside The Sulemaniye
Agfa Color 100-C
in The Grand Bazaar
Agfa Color 100-C
in The Grand Bazaar
Agfa Color 100-C
Inside The Sultan Ahmet
Agfa Color 100-C
Inside The Sultan Ahmet
Konica Minolta VX100 in the square looking at the Sultan Ahmet Blue Mosque
Konica Minolta VX100 in the square looking at the Hagia Sofia
Konica Minolta VX100 in the Hagia Sofia
Konica Minolta VX100 in the Hagia Sofia
Konica Minolta VX100 in the Hagia Sofia
The Sulemaniya Courtyard – Kodak TMZ 3200
The Sultan Ahmet – Ilford Delta 3200
Kids on The Ferry – Ilford Delta 3200

We stayed within 100 yards of the Blue Mosque or Sultan Ahmet Mosque, which faces the Hagia Sofia; Cathedral of Holy Wisdom. What an amazing feeling it is to look left and right and see them both. Our trip consisted of visiting the Basilica Cisterns where you’ll see remnants of Ancient Rome, to the Mosques and bazaars and then to the Topkapi Palace and Seraglio of The Sultans.

We also took an excursion across to the Princes Islands; a ferry ride in the Sea of Marmara.

Our trip was finished off with a proper Turkish Bath at the C16th Ceberlitas Hamam.

To be honest, I was expecting Istanbul to be something like Egypt but what I discovered was a very modern, clean, wonderfully functioning city with polite helpful and friendly people, very unlike London. Everything was cheap and of good value – travel especially was easy and stress free; the Trams and Ferries use these coins you purchase, sort of tokens costing about $1 each. This was nearly 20 years ago so things may have changed drastically.

Galata Tower – Kodak TMZ 3200
Inside The Blue Mosque – Kodak TMZ 3200
Inside The Sultan Ahmet – Kodak TMZ 3200 and Bottom
Dog Walk – Fuji Neopan 1600
Photo Op – Fuji Neopan 1600
Tourists – Fuji Neopan 1600
Street Life – Kodak TMZ 3200
At Pierre Loti overlooking The Golden Horn and – Bosphorus. Kodak TRI-X 400
Istanbul Skyline – Kodak TRI-X 400
Inside The Topkapi Palace. Kodak TRI-X 400
Stall Holder and Customer – Ilford Delta 3200

Camera and Films

I took along a Contax G2 with the 21mm Carl Zeiss Biogon and the 45mm Planar. I also took along lots of Film; Fujichrome Velvia 100F, Provia 400X, Kodak Ektachrome E100vs, Fuji Neopan 1600 and Kodak TMZ 3200 Ilford Delta 3200 and Fuji Superia 200 and Reala 100, Agfacolor 100-c and Konica Minolta VX 100. I ruined a couple of rolls by not realizing my exposure compensation dial had shifted fully + and if it were Negative Film it’d be ok, but with Slide Film pretty ruined.

Topkapi Palace – Kodak E100vs
Topkapi Palace – Kodak E100vs
Whirling Dervishes – Fuji Velvia 100F
Whirling Dervishes – Fuji Velvia 100F

The other issue was that it had snowed; a lot! The Ektachrome couldn’t handle the contrast between bright sun and bright snow leaving everything else black! hehe! But that’s when the fast B&W film came into it’s own. For interiors I shot with the colour negative and B&W.

Mindless Street Photography

I decided to capture the sights and sounds by trying some Street Photography.

Now I was pretty inexperienced and thought Street Photography meant roaming around firing off random shots of strangers on the street – and that’s what I did. I’ve scores of frames of people and looking at them now I’ve got to laugh as they’re all pretty pointless. All I did was waste Film (and money) and almost 20 years later they’re only mildly interesting. I’ve since realized that Street Photography is a lot lot more different and difficult than that, and to capture something special is very very rare.

Alex Webb on Street Photography,

“Photographing on the street is largely about being open to the unexpectedSo often the most intriguing images come when one least expects them.

And – I suppose in relation to that – how important is failure, and the ability to absorb failure into your practice? And how big a part of photography is failure? 

I often say that street photography is 99.9% about failure. When trying to capture elusive moments in the street, I accept that failure is part of the process..”

I’d say my early attempts were 100% Big Fail! hehe! But live and learn.

John Garret in his must read book (The Art of Black and White Photography) for all those wanting to learn B&W’ says,

“The photographer is never completely detached, for he or she cannot avoid offering an interpretation of the subject by making a choice of camera angle, lens, exposure or darkroom treatment. Our memories of world events are usually conditioned by the great black and white news re- portage pictures. But the best reportage photography, such as that of Henri Cartier-Bresson, is just as often an acute vision of ordinary, everyday situations. What unites the greatest pictures in both spheres is that they were taken with respect for the subject and with a proper humility in the face of the feelings of others. The essence of successful reportage is to concentrate information and meaning in a single image. Black and white photography assists this concentration.”

He’s right, and by experience and time I can boldly state that B&W street photography or reportage is much more powerful than colour. My colour stuff here is very poor, whereas my B&W I like it a lot more.

Stall food – Kodak E100vs
In the Square – Fujichrome Provia 400X
Fujichrome Provia 400X
Shop Keeper – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
Shopping Girl – Kodak E100vs
Bored stallholder – Kodak E100vs
Square outside Yeni Cami Mosque – Fujichrome Provia 400X
Fenerbace Fans – Kodak E100vs
Steps – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
Ottoman Headstones – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
At The Bazaar – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
Topkapi Palace – Fujichrome Velvia 100F

I did take the usual touristy postcardy shots but I won’t include those in this selection.

I managed to find a few strips of B&W I had shot along with my slide boxes – many of which had been ruined by damp as I’d left my boxes in the cellar of my mother’s new house when she moved. Little did I know that it was riddled with damp and would lead to me losing dozens of my boxes of slide film which I’d shot over the years.

A shame I can’t find most of the B&W as that turned out far better than the colour photographs. I used fast Kodak TMZ3200, Ilford Delta 3200, Kodak TRI-X 400 and Fuji Neopan 1600 mostly when overcast and inside..

A Scanner with No ICE/IR clean

I yesterday took receipt of a Konica Minolta Dimage Scan Dual IV 35mm scanner. The speed, resolution, sharpness and detail is so far beyond the poor Epson 4990 Flatbed I’d had for the last 20 years that I’m amazed I’d used that old thing to scan 35mm with over the years. It was the scanner which has lead me to delve into the Film archives for long forgotten treasures.

The scanner has one Major fault which makes it pretty useless for old Colour Slides and negatives – it has NO Digital ICE and NO IR Clean – which means you’ll get he dirty scans I have here and no amount of spotting will save them! The Slides are great for projection but for scanning cleanly – forget it. I’ll have to ditch this scanner for one with ICE. So apologies for the crap in every photo!

Cups – Grand Bazaar – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
Paintings Grand Bazaar – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
Glasses Spice Bazaar – Kodak E100vs
Dome and Minaret – Fujichrome Provia 400X
Ottoman Cemetery – Fujichrome Velvia 100F
Arches – Fujichrome Provia 400X
Mosque detail – Fujichrome Provia 400X

The films were all decent, out of the colour Slide, the Provia 400X excelled, the Velvia and Kodak E100vs were too contrasty and it seems the film stock I had wasn’t great. The Fast B&W were all excellent – the Fuji Neopan 1600 finer and gentler, the Kodak and Delta 3200 were grittier and had more contrast. I was especially impressed with the soft muted gentle tones of the Konica VX100 and the Agfacolor 100 was a close second – both trumped the Reala.

If I were to go again, and hopefully I will, I’ll be sure to select an appropriate film. In hindsight, Fujichrome Provia 100 would be an ideal slide film, I wish Konica VX100 were still around as that tone is lovely. All the B&W films perform great – but I think I’d take a roll of Kodak Eastman Double X and perhaps Agfa APX 400 for lower light. For interiors I just used a wide angle, knowing I’ll be free from any blur at anything above 1/20 as it was a 21mm and I’d do the same again.

Overall, Ancient and Glorious Byzantium is a place anyone and everyone should visit and capture on Film, but whatever you do, don’t store your film in your Mum’s damp cellar and use a scanner with Digital ICE or Infra Red clean!

All Photos:
Contax G2 RF & Carl Zeiss 21mm Biogon T* f2.8, Carl Zeiss 45mm Planar T* f2, Carl Zeiss 90mm Sonnar T* f2.8
Shot on: Kodak Ektachrome E100vs, Fujichrome Velvia 100F, Fujichrome Provia 400X, Fujifilm Reala 100, AgfaColor 100-C, Konica Minolta VX100, Fujifilm Neopan 1600, Kodak TMZ 3200, Ilford Delta 3200, Kodak TRI-X 400
Scanned on a Konica Minolta Dimage Scan Dual IV
Edited on Lightroom Mac 5.

 

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About The Author

By Ibraar Hussain
I enjoy taking snaps.
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Comments

Dogman on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

Ibraar, I really enjoyed your article and photos. I especially liked the B&W pictures. Thank you so much for your insights into this wonderful part of the world.
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Mark Ellerby on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

I like your "Mindless" street photos, both the b/w and colour ones. There are some charming unguarded moments showing being just being themselves, and this gives a flavour of the place.

I wish Fuji still made Reala, it was one of my favourites.
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Simon Foale on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

Thanks for taking us to Byzantium Ibraar. Many fabulous images here. Good luck finding a decent film scanner with ICE.
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James Langmesser on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

If you have not already, consider looking at the work of the Turkish photographer Ara Guler. You will, I believe, enjoy his street photography of Constantinople. Your words about your feelings about the city reminded me very much of the preface to the Englishman William Hutton's book, "The Story of Constantinople," 1925, in the Medieval Towns and Cities series, "It is the holiday-task, very pleasant to him, of a College don, to whom there is no city in the world so impressive and so fascinating as the ancient home of the Caesars of the East". When I read that, I was determined to go there, twice, in the '80's to, perhaps the correct word, is savor the city. I took two Leicas, and M6 and an M3, the M3 for black and white, the M6 for slides. I think based on your article, I will relook the pictures and slides to savor the city again.
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Reinhold on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

Your images are awesome and the Contax G2 with its lenses are real gems.
What a wonderful story you made. For me too, this city will always be Byzantium, the famous, incredible wealthy and incredible powerful capital of one of the most underrated empires in history. I visited Byzantium in 2008 and 2010 and even if some of its impressive buildings have been created by the Ottomans, the inner core of this marvel was built by the Byzantine Empire. I placed some of m y then images on flickr here https://www.flickr.com/photos/rgiw/albums/72157633853836231/ and there https://www.flickr.com/photos/rgiw/albums/72157652635568291/.
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Jeffery Luhn on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

Ibraar,
As we have come to expect from you, great photos!

I've only been to a small part of Turkey to visit Ephasus, Milantus, and Dydima
in 2004. That gave me a taste for how well Turkey has preserved ancient sites. You demonstrated that Byzantium looks like the motherlode of antiquity.

It's your B&W that is the most outstanding. When I look at many of my Kodachromes and Ektachromes it's obvious that I was demanding much more than those film stocks could deliver. Under cloudy skies or in open shade the portraits were glorious, but in clear bright conditions, they pile up into useless heaps. That is where digital excels. As you showed, nothing beats well exposed B&W film in dramatic lighting! Thanks for sharing those images!
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Gary Smith on Byzantium – Ancient Constantinople, Modern Istanbul – On Film and Through the eye of my Contax G2

Comment posted: 19/06/2025

I have hoped to be able to visit that part of the world at some point however I feel that I'm running out of time for such a journey.

Ibraar, you have taken some amazing photos over the years! With your new scanner hopefully you'll share some that we have yet to see.

Thanks so much!
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