Episodes
As promised, we finally have our first international guest on the podcast.  From his quaint home in the forests of Slovenia, wetplate collodion photographer and printmaker Borut Peterlin sits down to talk about his journey from carpenter to photographer. Matching the utility of his 1972 Landrover, Borut hasn't confined himself to just one-off wetplates, but instead continues a tradition of alternative printing techniques to fully recognize his vision. And while he may have an accent, don't...
Published 03/01/23
We're heading to the East Coast in this episode to sit down with professional music photographer and owner of NYC Tintype, Justin Borucki. For the last 9 years, Justin has been incorporating wetplate collodion work along side his professional music artist portraits. Listen in as he talks about his exploits of carting around a mobile studio while capturing the NYC street life from bodegas to passersby, what it's like photographing some of the biggest talents in music and how a pirate stirred...
Published 02/22/23
This week's episode of Tin Questions takes me a few hours down the road to a small, artistic mountain town located in south central Colorado to speak with photographer Tim Brown, owner/operator of Salida Tintype. Tim has been a professional photographer for decades, growing up with film and moving to digital but was intrigued with the look that wetplate photography could provide as a tool for his creative visions.  Listen in as we learn about what started this love of the process, his...
Published 02/15/23
In this episode, I have the pleasure of sitting down with one of the veterans of the modern day collodion movement.  Jody Ake was getting into the process in the late 90's when information was scarce and practicing wetplate photographers were even harder to find.  While working on his Master's thesis, Jody challenged himself to learn this vintage process after being inspired at the library and delved into the ethers to capture dark portraits reflecting the mortality of one's self. His...
Published 02/08/23
Next up on Tin Questions - a man and a bus and a camera.  What else is there to know? Plenty, so listen in as I talk to Joseph Wyman Brown and find out more about his love of photography and capturing the essence of people through portraits, his gear and what life on the road is like when you're slingin' tin. 
Published 02/01/23
In this episode of Tin Questions, I chat with tintypist Christine Eadie who focuses in on a specific timeframe of American history, the Civil War.  Tintypes were highly sought after from 1861 through 1865 as soldiers marched off to war and modern day reenactors are no different. Christine shares how she jumped into the genre of reenactment photography, the challenges that come when working with collodion out of a tent on sutler's row and her passion for sharing this process with others.    
Published 01/25/23
This week's episode of Tin Questions sits down with California collodionist, Conrad Young and talks about about his journey into wetplate. With some great stories on capturing the solemn landscapes of Canyon de Chelly, what it's like living in a mobile darkroom on the road and chatting about his big ideas for a future dream project, there's lots to take in with our latest guest on the show.
Published 01/18/23
In this season opener of Tin Questions, I've asked my friend Shane Balkowitsch to sit down with me and dig into not only his passion for wetplate, but talk about his natural light studio and photographic gear.  With over a decade of shooting wetplate collodion ambrotypes in Bismarck, North Dakota, Shane and I chat about his experience creating his first plates, his current projects including his ongoing series of images for "Northern Plains Native Americans - A Modern Wetplate Perspective"...
Published 01/11/23
Welcome to Tin Questions! In 1851, Frederick Scott Archer released the wetplate collodion process to the world enabling photographers with the ability to create ambrotypes and tintypes. A hundred years later, the process was almost relegated to the dustbin of history until a recent resurgence of creative photographers came along. Modern day practitioners of the process are the centerstage of this podcast hosted by Chad Shryock (Porkpie Photography). Each episode will talk one on one with...
Published 01/02/23