A walk round Portland, Oregon with a Leica M3 and Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar

By Gary Smith

The city of Portland, Oregon straddles the Willamette River and has 12 bridges from south to north crossing the Willamette before it joins the Columbia River. I thought I’d try to capture a few of the iconic sites using my recently acquired Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar to see how the mismatch between what I’d see in the viewfinder would be vs. what the lens would capture on either side. Turns out it wasn’t too difficult. I’ve left the included images as they were scanned although I’ve reduced their size from 7968 x 5320 pixels to 1800 x 1202. I also intentionally did minimal other tweaks in post other than removing haze (in the past I’ve fiddled with included images using Silver eFex Pro 2).

The day wasn’t really sunny and I use a TTArtisan shoe-mount meter on the M3. All of these were developed in Cinesill Df96 monobath for 6 seconds and then scanned using my Sony a7R3 combined with a 50/2.8 macro lens. I shot the scans on Aperture priority at f8 which made the shutter speed 1/50 making the scan 42.4mp.

Steel Bridge – View 2

Portland suburbs extend approximately 15 miles to both the east and west and the city has a light rail system. The light rail uses the Steel bridge to enter the city from the east. The light rail uses the upper desk while automobiles and pedestrians use the lower deck.

Burnside Bridge

All of Portland’s bridges allow for river traffic and they either function as a draw bridge or the deck levers open. The Burnside bridge span opens between the two towers with the east and west sides opening to approximately 80 degrees. The stability of the bridge has been called into question due to the probability of damage from the likely Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake (which could happen at any time, or so they say). Plans are being drawn up, but the replacement costs of an earthquake-proof bridge remain steep.

Another local “attraction” is Voodoo Donuts, known for all sorts of strange donut concoctions. A classic being a person shaped donut with facial decorations and stabbed through the red heart decoration with a pretzel stick. The tall building in the background is the US Bank tower (where my wife once worked for many years).

Voodoo Donuts

Another Portland icon is Powell’s City of Books, which claims to be the world’s largest independent book seller with over 68,000 square feet. Powell’s sells new and used books as well as magazines, cards, odds-n-ends and antique books.

Powell’s – Main Entrance

After shooting the main entrance and wandering around inside for an hour or so, I stopped next door at a Starbucks for a coffee. I decided that I needed to shoot the Powell’s entrance located at 11th and Couch to see how much of the building to the north I could get with the 21mm lens. Seems like I got it all.

Powell’s Entrance @ 11th and Couch

I didn’t completely use the 24 exposures of Tri-X on my morning walk around the city. The last couple of shots were taken a few days later and I developed and scanned the film yesterday (24 August).

Despite not having frame lines for the 21mm lens, it seems that I was still able to frame the shots I wanted.

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About The Author

By Gary Smith
Lived in various US metro-areas from the east coast, south, Midwest and Pacific Northwest while chasing a career. Currently retired and living outside Portland, Oregon. Shooting film again (as well as developing). Have a mix of digital and film cameras and lenses in various formats.
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Comments

Daniel Castelli on A walk round Portland, Oregon with a Leica M3 and Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar

Comment posted: 27/10/2024

Hi Gary,
I took the 21 f/4 to London in 2017. It was fitted to my M2 with the Voigtlander 21mm aux. viewfinder. I just couldn’t trust the framing I viewed through the finder. But that is just me. Other photographers make that combo sing. now have a 20mm Nikkor on a FE2. I leave a 35mm on the M2. Things work now.
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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 27/10/2024

Leica's whole notion of hanging a finder over the camera just seems odd to me. I didn't really have trouble framing my shots and let's face it, the content at either end of a wide-angle shot is likely of less interest (otherwise it would be in the center). Thanks for your comment!

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Jeffery Luhn on A walk round Portland, Oregon with a Leica M3 and Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar

Comment posted: 27/10/2024

Hi Gary,
I left some earlier comments on my cell phone, but they may not have gone through. These are very good documentary shots of Portland, a city I adore! The shots have a vintage vibe. Grainy, but sharp, and warm tones. Burnside and Steel bridge are my favorites of the group. You wrote that you processed in monobath for 6 seconds. Either you are the king of brinkmanship, or you meant 6 minutes. Your are scaring me, Gary, at 6 seconds!!
Jeffery Luhn
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Gary Smith on A walk round Portland, Oregon with a Leica M3 and Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar

Comment posted: 27/10/2024

Hi Jeffrey, thanks for your reply. It does seem there are issues with replies on 35mmc over the last few days.
You're correct, it was 6 minutes certainly NOT 6 seconds!!
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Graham Line on A walk round Portland, Oregon with a Leica M3 and Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar

Comment posted: 29/10/2024

Nicely-seen photos of my home city for the past 30 years. The Steel Bridge is even more interesting than Gary describes. The Union Pacific railroad and Amtrak use the lower level and there is a pedestrian walkway on its upstream side. The upper level has pedestrian sidewalks and light-rail tracks. Both levels can be raised and lowered independently. Spring flood waters in the Willamette can reach as high as the bottom of the lower level.
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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 29/10/2024

Thanks for your comment Graham, I didn't know that about the steel bridge! I've only lived here for 25 years or so. Although my wife did ride the Max to/from downtown from Gresham, she'd better know about the bridge than I would. I do know that waiting for the Burnside bridge to raise/lower can be a bit longer than you might want. I had hoped to get shots of all the bridges but my morning walk ended up being confined to that one section of town.

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adventurepdx on A walk round Portland, Oregon with a Leica M3 and Voigtländer 21/4 Color-Skopar

Comment posted: 31/10/2024

Lovely photos, Gary! I particularly like the one of Big Pink from Ankeny Alley.

This Portland bridge geek has one point of correction though: On the Steel Bridge, light rail, automobiles, pedestrians, and bicycles use the top deck, while the bottom deck is for passenger and freight rail, pedestrians, and bicycles. It is one of the most multi-modal bridges in the world, and the second-oldest still operating vertical lift bridge in the US. (The other? The Hawthorne Bridge, just a mile upriver!)
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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 31/10/2024

Who knew that there's be two comments correcting my misunderstanding of the steel bridge? I suppose Big Pink would be a better title than Voodoo Donuts but I figured more people would be curious about the donut shop. Now I'm curious about your screen name, are you a Portland tourist guide? Do tell...

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