View allAll Photos Tagged Camera.
Had a bit of fun designing this small, original model inspired by classic cameras. Building guides available at chrismcveigh.com
Zorki 1 with Jupiter 12, Fuji X-E1 with 7Artisans 35/1.2.
Shoot by Graflex Century Graphic 2x3, Wollensak 90mm f/12.5 Anastigmat Extreme W.A. Ilford HP5. Kodak XTOL 1+2.
Well, my old F80 was shaking, albeit, slightly!! A stack of some of my old cameras!
Flickr Lounge - Weekly Theme (Week 19) ~ Stacked ...
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all.
At 5:04pm (ET) Wednesday (6/29), SpaceX launched the SES-22 payload atop Falcon9 booster B1073.
Cloudy skies made for a moody backdrop as the rocket thundered off the pad.
Views from the pad were captured with sound-activated cameras.
(📷: me /
@WeReportSpace
)
Red Flag 20, Changhai No.2 Camea Factory China 1997.
The 1977 Red Flag 20 (Hong Qi 20 红旗20) is a Chinese copy of the Leica M4. Reportedly only 182 were made in a period from 1971 to 1976 when production officially ended. The cameras were made on the orders of Chiang Ching, the last wife of Mao Tzeo Dong. With the camera are a f=50mm 1:1.4, a f=35mm 1:1.4 and a f=90mm 1:2.0, all copies of Leitz lenses.
Michaels Camera Museum, Melbourne
I went to the circus this weekend =) If you'd like to see some pictures from there, head here: www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=204974&id=706588689&am...
A low-cost Japanese camera made by Fuji (the leatherette on the back is stamped "Made by Fuji Photo Film Co."). The lens is a Fujinar 4.5cm f/3.5, three elements, and on the inside of the hinged back there is a small sticker recommending Fuji film.
Quite well made for a cheap camera. The shutter has 4 speeds (25-200) plus B, all working reasonably accurately, and the shutter is extremely quiet. The diaphragm has only 4 blades but moves easily with very little friction. And the front element focuses easily and smoothly after all these years (I'm guessing this camera was made in the late 1950's, before Fuji got serious about making good cameras).
But as was common with early 35's in the U.S.A., you have to push a small lever on the back after each exposure in order to release the winding mechanism (reminiscent of the Argus C-3 of the 1940's). The sprocket is in the film tracks and is not geared to the winding knob. And you have to set the frame counter to zero yourself. And you have to cock the shutter yourself (with the left hand side of the black rocker arm) and you release the shutter with the right hand side of the rocker arm. Both operations are easy enough to do using the forefingers of both hands while you hold the camera.
There is no double exposure prevention, so you can easily make double exposures with this camera. You just cock the shutter again and fire. I am anxious to try this camera with film. I am always motivated when a camera requires special effort to obtain results.
The camera was photographed on a hand-embroidered Hungarian tablecloth from the 1950's.
I'm not sure what the collective noun for them all would be, but I've been busy making batches of things!
It's particularly satisfying finishing these camera brooches, as they're made up of lots of different details.
What is a camera for? What indeed is a photograph? What the hell is art? Shall we continue with the questions?
In painting, the Impressionists first started messing with "reality" in the late 19th century. And then things really got going with Picasso and Braque and their Cubism. Meanwhile photography was desperately trying to establish its credentials as fine art through the work of Alfred Stieglitz and his circle.
As it so happens it was photographers who were at the centre of a new movement that would pull the rug out from the bottom of all the best theories of art. They took the name Dada, and it was a distinct reaction to the horrors of the first truly modern and technological conflict, The Great War of 1914-1918. magazine.artland.com/what-is-dadaism/
Two photographers were among the most creative members of the new movement: Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) and Man Ray (1890-1976). This would later spread out and merge with Surrealism, the Russian Constructivists and Conceptual Art. That's enough of the history to whet your appetite.
But why is this important? Well I think that the Dadaists were not only the first "artists" to call into question the nature of art, but essentially they were also the first moderns to question the nature of reality itself (well perhaps Einstein beat them to it in another field). The old "scientific" certainties were disappearing fast. When Neils Bohr and his Copenhagen school of Quantum physics emerged (at precisely the same time as Dada!), even Einstein could not go that far. But in fact the Quantum Theory is now the best available way we have of understanding "reality".
So the concept of photo montage was born. Putting together distinctly unrelated images to create a new photography - to MAKE a photograph rather than to simply TAKE one. Perhaps the most famous of all (though least controversial then) was Man Ray's image of a woman as a violin. roblangleyimages.wordpress.com/2013/04/28/making-meaning/
The Surrealists added a new dimension - the unconscious through the influence of Freud and Jung. All these traditions are worth exploring again in this age of digital photography where the internet universe is literally flooded with TAKEN images.
The French cultural theorist Roland Barthes (1915-1980) wrote perhaps his most influential book near the end of his life, and it was all about his (non-photographer's) perspective on the nature of a photograph. He called it "Camera Lucida" meaning from the Latin, "light chamber". But the Camera Lucida was also a device invented by William Hyde Wollaston in 1806 to assist artists to sketch the world. Remember that the pioneer of photography in Britain, Henry Fox Talbot (1800-1877) called photography "sketching with light".
Jamie Windsor does a wonderful job of presenting Roland Barthes' ideas about "Camera Lucida", so you'd do well to watch his presentation: "How to understand the PUNCTUM in PHOTOGRAPHY — Roland Barthes’ CAMERA LUCIDA"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=P15OTM3E97s&t=515s
My point here is to say that there is indeed a place for photo art or the "made photograph" (I showed you some of the work of leading Australian photo artist Anne Zahalka recently). My preference is for the hands-on cut-and-paste methods of the Dadaists - photo montage. Something that requires the artist to manually "construct" the image rather than simply to rely on ready-made apps to do the job (Duchamp would appreciate that pun).
* I should add that I took both photographs incorporated into this little montage. The man disappearing down the lens is from an image crafted by Iain McIntyre, Tiger By the Tail Designs in 2004. The meaning of this montage is for you to decide.
Film transport knob and wheel of the Brownie Bulls-Eye camera (from the late 1950s) . When the film is winded , the vertical wheel also turns , unlocking the double exposure prevention and resetting the shutter.
(for "Macro Mondays")
I shoot a lot of paper negatives and want to share one of my recent instagram posts about my fav setup. seems like a cool diversion here.
(On this episode of #shoesandcameras is my daily driver setup for shooting paper negatives, On the right is the well respected Pentax Asahi spot meter V, released in 1965 its still dead accurate and an important tool as paper negatives have a notoriously narrow exposure latitude compared to film, this allows metering for small parts of the scene for accuracy. The camera here is the Rolleicord VB, the last iteration of the series its ideal for paper negatives because of its slow speeds, the cable release and self timer eliminate camera shake on long exposures. Its fitted with the Rollei sun shade and light yellow filter to cut down the blue light bringing out the clouds and giving a more natural filmic look. Leather wingtips by Nautica, shout out to Bigheadtaco for turning me on to shoesandcameras, and James R. Kyle for lending me the meter.)
Leidolf Wetzlar! This camera’s 50mm f/3.8 lens and apparent top shutter speed of 1/200 seems very limiting, which may be part of the reason Leidolf wasn’t around for very long. With only three shutter speeds (plus bulb), no light meter and no way to check focus, it must have been maddening to take good photos with this camera.
The kind of love that I have for cameras is reserved only for cameras. I don't find it anywhere else and I don't want to.
Shawn one of the models at the Vancouver strobist meetup. He is scared of cameras.
2x bare 580EXII left & right of Shawn for key
QBox24 w/580EXII on-axis for fill
Triggered by Cybersync
I came in my room to find she had set up her library of books like this and was pretending to take pictures of them. I got the perfect shot.
Explore Oct. 21 #154 !
Billingham eat your heart out!
Chinese military bag
Muji handbag insert (padded, pockets)
35RC
emergency granola bar
film
lens hood
Thanks for the invite to Effected Cameras, Dan A
I know this composition has been done before, but I am working on a few projects with my vintage cameras, so I wanted to have one of my own.
Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media
without my explicit permission.© All rights reserved.
يرجى عدم استخدام أي صورة من صوري على مواقع الإنترنت او المدونات أو وسائل الإعلام
الأخرى دون إذن صريح مني
My first digital camera, which I took apart a few years ago after it had totally died. The camera was released in 2000 and was a big 2 megapixels. Yep, 2. Here’s a review of the camera if you’re interested in taking a stroll down memory lane:
www.dpreview.com/reviews/kodakdc290
Cheers,
Wade
IN ENGLISH BELOW THE LINE
La mansió anglesa de Lacock Abbey fou l'escenari on William Henry Fox Talbot descobrí la fotografia, realitzant el primer negatiu fotografic aquí el 1835. Es tracta d'un negatiu de paper poc més gran que un segell, fet amb el que la seva dona anomenava "càmeres de trampa de ratolins".
Al museu de la fotografía que hi ha a Lacock Abbey podeu veure tant una copia d'aquest famós primer negatiu (que obviament no està aquí), com del tipus de cameres primitives que emprà. Es tracta de tansols una caixeta de fusta amb una lent al davant i una trapa al darrera per a carregar-la.
De manera resumida, mullà paper fí amb sal de taula i nitrat de plata; el posà a la càmera i la deixà mirant cap a la finestra durant força temps. M'han comentat que entre 15 minuts i dues hores, però crec que més aviat fou entre 2 i 3 hores. A la llum d'espelmes va veure que el paper havia obtingut la imatge del finestral... en negatiu. Tot seguit el va submergir en una forta sol·lució de sal, el que quasi fixà la imatge en el seu estat. No fou fins 6 anys després que es va descobrir que amb tiosulfat de sodi la imatge quedava perfectament fixada, en dissoldre la resta de sals de plata presents (que enfosquirien del tot la imatge, amb el temps).
Fox Talbot no va publicar els seus treballs fins el 1839, quan el varen sorpendre les noticies que arrivaven de França, on Louis Daguerre havia presentat solemnement el seu procés amb planxes de plata i tòxics vapors de iode i mercuri, el daguerrotip.
Fox Talbot va millorar molt el seu propi procés el 1840, en incorporar el fixador i sobretot en aconseguiir reduir les expossicions de 3 hores a 3 minuts (i fins a menys de un, amb un bon objectiu). Ho va anomenar calotip.
Però des del 1839 fins al 1851, els daguerrotips varen dominar la fotografia completament, ja que eren impressionantment més definits i permetien fàcilment retrats. Però els calotips es podien copiar, al ser negatius, cosa que feu que la evolució de la fotografia (amb la placa humida a partir de 1851) fos a partir de la obra de Fox Talbot.
ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Henry_Fox_Talbot
ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abadia_de_Lacock
======================
The English mansion of Lacock Abbey was the scene where William Henry Fox Talbot discovered photography, making the first photographic negative here in 1835. It is a paper negative little bigger than a stamp, made from what his wife called "mouse trap cameras".
In the Fox Talbot Museum, at the entrance of Lacock Abbey, you could see a copy of both the first negative he took, and of the type of primitive cameras he used, just a wood box with a lens in front and a trap behind to load it.
Briefly, wet fine paper with table salt and silver nitrate; he put it on the camera and left it staring at the window for quite some time. They told me that between 15 minutes and two hours, but I think it was more like between 2 and 3 hours. In the candlelight he saw that the paper had obtained the image of the window...in negative. He then immersed it in a strong salt solution, which almost fixed the image in its state. It wasn't until 6 years later that it was discovered that with sodium thiosulphate the image was perfectly fixed, by dissolving the rest of the silver salts present (which would completely darken the image, over time).
Fox Talbot did not publish his work until 1839, when he was surprised by the news arriving from France, where Louis Daguerre had solemnly presented his process with silver plates and toxic vapors of iodine and mercury, the daguerreotype.
Fox Talbot greatly improved his own process in 1840, by incorporating the fixer and especially by managing to reduce exposures from 3 hours to 3 minutes (and down to less than one, with a good objective). He called it a calotype.
But from 1839 to 1851, daguerreotypes dominated photography completely, as they were impressively sharper and easily allowed portraits. But calotypes could be copied, being negatives, making the evolution of photography (with the wet plate from 1851 onwards) from the work of Fox Talbot.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacock_Abbey
Our new hound hid behind the tree when he saw my camera.
He is a blue tick coonhound mix, so we named him "Blue." Very original.