View allAll Photos Tagged Camera
These 3 are old photos taken by by father back in 2004. Unfortunately I don't know the model.
I like its boxy, angular design.
Thanks to dusqweeze, I now know this is an Argus C3 camera. A low-end camera produced between 1939 to 1966.
I love the silhouetted trees against the clouds and blue sky. Taken with Cooper's collar camera.
Cooper's official blog: www.PhotographerCat.com | Cooper on Facebook
Buy Cooper's photo book, framed photos and more at Cooper's gallery store.
Here is my camera kit bag...
my:
Canon EF 70-300MM IS USM LENS
CANON 450D SLR CAMERA
CANON EF 24-105MM F.4 L IS USM LENS
CANON BG-E5 (battery grip)
CANON G9 POWERSHOT CAMERA
LOWEPRO MINI TREKKER AW BAG
CANON ET-65B (lenshood for 70-300mm IS USM Lens)
CANON EW-83H (lenshood for 24-105mm f.4 L IS USM Lens)
Lenspen cloth
clear plastic bags for lens for the rain
Taken on my OLD HP R717 powershot Camera
That what it says on the back -- only one "g", not two as you would expect.
All I know is that I'd love to check out every camera in this photo, especially that great Graflex on the left. Yum!
Oh, and I love the lady with the pants. She's my kind of gal!
EXA Jhagee Dresden
just bought it at used camera market
in Ginza Tokyo.
PENTAX *ist DS2 / SIGMA MACRO 50mm F2.8 EX DG
So I needed to take a photo of myself for some camera magazine thing, and they said, head and shoulders with a camera in it.
Splendid.
I know you'd love to:
Went to Kawagoe, a beautiful part of Saitama that houses many remnants of old Edo Japan. While wandering about found this fellow weilding what research found to be a Topcon Horseman Press. Right in front of the historical Toki no Kane clock tower.
this is one of the shots from our underwater photo shoot. we just bought two really low quality dispodable underwater cameras at rite aid and went to work in her pool. its mostly in the shade so they didn't turn out as well as the could. it also doesn't help that the bubbles got in the way. I hope to get a case for my actual camera and take more. it was a lot of fun.
we, adults, are constantly clicking with our cameras
mostly her, the center of the universe :-)
she's used to it
she loves it
she DEMANDED! a camera of her own
so I made her a soft one form scrap cotton yarn, amigurumi style, posing here like a pro on a real tripod
I made it for one reason - here we don't have something a three year old girl could manage (and not break on first attempt)
If there is one toddler resistant camera, I would surely buy one for her
not to spoil her (she's already spoiled enough)
I'm really, really curious what would her photos look like
Until I get a "real" macro lens, I'm winging it with this REAL Old School, "poor mans macro" setup.
It consists of a 43 year old 55mm f1.8 Super Takumar 'standard' lens (from my 1968 era Honeywell Pentax Spotmatic camera) coupled to a simple 30mm extension tube, finally terminating in an inexpensive M42 to Nikon F mount adaptor.
This combo, while it will neither auto-focus or 'meter' in any mode (that never stopped me before!) produces tack- sharp, very high resolution macro images of apprx. 1.25:1 magnification factor on my Nikon D90.
I'll be posting a few test images I obtained with this set-up shortly!
I dont ask anymore about the get ups...
He loves to take pictures with his camera...not sure why he had to put a necklace on lately but whatever..(he wants to be just like mommy)
My Canon G1 replication back, it is the socks room displayed on the back. made for my up coming exhibition at Maastricht this May.
Look what I found! The matchbox fits perfectly!
This Vest Pocket Kodak came in by mail yesterday, isn't it fantastic? I'll show more of it later.
Introduced in 1912, the original Kodak "Vest Pocket" Camera represented "breakthrough technology" for its day. The pocket-sized folding camera looked almost exactly like the larger folding Kodaks but used a new small film size. The little rolls of film yielded eight 1 5/8" X 2 1/2" exposures each -- large enough to make contact prints but small enough to keep the camera palm-sized. The so-called "miniature" camera first retailed at $6.00 -- far less than the larger folding models -- and became popular with soldiers during World War One.
The "Vest Pocket Model B" which Mallory used on Everest, was introduced in 1924, and included several new design features. One of the most significant was the "autographic" window on the camera back. By sliding a small door open, the photographer was able to inscribe some information about the picture through the backing paper, directly onto the film -- a distant ancestor to today's "day / date" modes in some electronic cameras.
Well that is fantastic! A small autographic window on the back to write down some information of the taken picture!
This little girl was making a little fuss at first, as soon as I turned my camera to her she was just a little princess. I said "little" a lot just now.
my attempt at making a 5x4 camera, cost me under £10 to build so not a bad attempt, just need to get a lens for it and make a back.
©1940-1950's - Encore Camera Co - Hollywood CA
Cardboard "disposable" camera - factory loaded with film
You were to snap your photos, mail-in the camera with film inside, and later receive your prints in the post.
Apparently, this idea never really caught on and these cameras were often junked, or found unused - as is in this case.
Not commonly seen and when found, rarely has the original box and all paperwork.
This is a pretty neat find!
Old camera i recently got my hands on. not sure if it works. i got a old video recorder from around the same date.
Vik and I bwtween us made a little pile of pinhole cameras using the instructions for making a pinhole camera from a matchbox from alspix
why? Because Sunday 30th April is Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day, and we want to play. We're lucky that there's an event taking palce in Redcliffe Caves tomorrow where we're going to learn to make pinhole cameras from beercans, and use the caves as a darkroom to process them. It looks like a great event - details here, and details of events that may be taking place in your city here
So no idea if these will work - I am hopelessly inept at fiddly things - we'll see how they go..... oh, and I've cleverly managed to take a pic with the pinhole side on the bottom - stupid me! I'll do another tomorrow
The camera that started it all. This one's from the 1840's and part of the collection of the Smithsonian Museum of American History.
I like this one much betterrr. I bought this old film Minolta today in a charity shop, a whole £8. Bugger knows if it works or not, but i have a terrible obsession with old cameras. If i had the room and money, i'd buy tons. Maybe i'll take pictures of them all (:
Anyways, I put the camera on top of all my revision crap to represent the fact i would much rather take photos than revise boring old english. Ive got a week till my exam, and i've barely done any revision. eeek. hello fail.
I love old cameras♥
Textures: