View allAll Photos Tagged Backside
So, after a REALLY long time, we went out for a day out and about. We visited the Dallas zoo and I got to practice my rusty photography skills again. I took only my 55-250 lens attached with a hood and I was very pleased with some of the shots. I will be sharing some of them over time. For some reason, I really like this shot, I think the light is great, although if he had been tilted to towards the camera ever so slightly, it would have been even better.
Joe Rajsteter
Warren County, New Jersey
© DRB 2014 all rights reserved. Unauthorized use or reproduction for any reason is prohibited.
Angus blasting out a backside stall at DIY Delside back in the summer
I used a small softbox handheld to add a little extra to the shady spot and got low with the fisheye.
every human being has a backside ... - comment by Anirudh: but every human don't have such !!! serene ...
sweater-jcrew
tshirt-tag has a heart on it
shorts-friend's yard sale years ago
leggings-forever 21
slippers-last years xmas gift
I love my hair when i get out of the shower and i don't brush it.
Josh Douglas
Boca Raton, Florida
Nikon D70, Nikkor Dx 10.5mm f/2.8 Fisheye, 2 Nikon Sb-25, 1 Quantum T2 fired via Pocket Wizards
[5dmk2, 100mm f2.8L, CS3]
This is the backside of "Goliath," my ancient Fujica G960 BL medium format rangefinder camera. It's not a pretty sight. Normally, Goliath produces massive 9x6cm negatives using medium-format film. As an experiment, I decided to adapt this behemoth so that it produced panoramic pictures using standard 35mm film. The first problem was securing a 35mm film cassette into a chamber designed for medium format film. After a lot of messing around, I found that placing two polystyrene pellets (as used in packing delicate items for the post) in the film chamber was the best way of securing the 35mm cassette. The film is then pulled across to the take-up spool on the right and attached to it with masking tape. With the back closed, two strokes of the wind-on lever are required to move the film to the next frame. The standard lens with this camera is the 100mm / f3.5 Fujinon although the viewfinder has lines for 100mm and 150mm lenses. Framing panoramic shots with this set-up is a bit of an inexact science but great fun. From my first roll of 36 exposure b+w film, I was able to get 13 panoramas, each measuring 24mm by nearly 90mm! As an added bonus, the picture spills on to the borders of the frames, around the sproket holes.... looks very cool (but unfortunately my current scanner can't scan the borders so I can't share the coolness).
Once you get to the end of the film, you can't rewind it (this is a medium format camera which is designed to use rollfilm, remember). I take the film out of the camera in a dark bag and feed it directly onto the developing reel and then place the reel in a Jobo tank ready for developing.
See my stream for some panoramic photos produced by Goliath.
eg:
www.flickr.com/photos/monz/4633273714/
www.flickr.com/photos/monz/4633288882/
Eat your heart out Hasselblad XPan users :-)