Behind the Lens

A look into the process, the chemistry, and the philosophy behind the frames.

A messy darkroom workbench covered in contact sheets, film rolls, and developing tanks

Workspace / Darkroom 01

October 14, 2008

The First Roll

The first time I held the Leica M6, it felt cold and heavy. Not a burden, but an anchor. I walked the streets until my feet bled, looking for light in the shadows. There is a silence in analog photography that digital cannot replicate—a pause between the shutter click and the realization of the image.

Technical NoteShot on Kodak Tri-X 400. Pushed to 1600. Developed in Rodinal 1:50 for high acutance and pronounced grain structure.

March 02, 2015

Sanctuary in Red

The darkroom became my sanctuary. The smell of fixer, the hum of the ventilation, the red safety light—it was a ritual. Watching an image emerge from the void on fiber paper taught me a patience that the modern world had stolen. It wasn't just about making a picture; it was about crafting an object.

Technical NotePrint details: 11×14 fiber-based paper. Split-grade printing technique. Dodge and burn map: +2s shadows, -1s highlights.

Present Day

The Narrative Arc

Now, it is entirely about the narrative. Every frame must earn its place on the roll. We don't just take photos; we preserve moments of time that would otherwise slip away unnoticed. The grain is the texture of memory itself.

Technical NoteCurrent kit: Hasselblad 500C/M. 80mm Planar T*. Portra 400 for color work, Ilford HP5 for the soul.

Alex Carter

Founder & Lead Photographer

Alex Carter