View allAll Photos Tagged LomoCamera
This is a picture of my beloved Lomo LC-A camera.
Its is pure photographic joy all wrapped up in a neat little black box.
This is actually my third LC-A, the first one i won on eBay never turned up. The second one's shutter was stuck and don't fire. So i went and got this from a camera shop and probably paid too much. But it was still in its original wrapping from the Lomo company, so i got it new and am it's first owner!!!
It takes the most magical images, sometimes sharp, sometimes not. the colours always pop. and as for the vignetting....well........and if you load it with slide film, it shows you a world you never knew was out there.
> camera = La Sardina 8 Ball
> lens = 22mm Wide-Angle Plastic Lens
> aperture = Fixed f/8
> film = Kodak Portra 160 VC
> expired = DATE UNKNOWN
> New York Mets vs. Miami Marlins
> score = NY Mets 7 Miami Marlins 3
> View from the top row of the stadium
Diptych #45: take me far away
for dip-it-thursday's theme: pieces of you ~ dippy self-portraits
"Books are for people who wish they were somewhere else."
— Mark Twain
A Lomo of: "The Wall" on "The Wall" :-)
Pink Floyd meets Berlin.
I took this image to remember 2 things...history of the Berlin wall and to remember the great concert of Roger Waters (Pink Floyd) in the o2 World Berlin 2011. We have been there last year and will never forget this awesome show!
The Wall: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wall
Wiki quotes:
"The East Side Gallery is an international memorial for freedom. It is a 1.3 km long section of the Berlin Wall located near the centre of Berlin on Mühlenstraße in Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg.
The Gallery consists of 105 paintings by artists from all over the world, painted in 1990 on the east side of the Berlin Wall. It is possibly the largest and longest-lasting open air gallery in the world."
More Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Side_Gallery
125/365 More ringflash loveliness together with my Holga. Took me a while to set up, only because I wanted a white(ish) background and had to fashion one out of some wrapping paper - I have ingenuity you see. Argh I LOVE the catchlights you get with ringflashes!
Taken at ISO 100 and f/11, in retrospect I think I'd have tweaked that a bit, but too late now :)
> camera = La Sardina 8 Ball
> lens = 22mm Wide-Angle Plastic Lens
> aperture = Fixed f/8
> film = Kodak Portra 160 VC
> expired = DATE UNKNOWN
feeling good...a....and model/actress and graduated with a law degree....
Click: Andrea Forseka Blogs on . . .
www.andreafonseka.blogspot.com/
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Finally got to sit near the wing on a flight with my camera. Ended up shooting a whole film on an hours flight back from Amsterdam. Might stick some more up.
I have made a few yers ago a few films using the Lomo Kino all hand held. I scanned the strips and cut the individual pictures out with MS photo editor then added the frames to a short film.
The camera is a bit picky in the film you use, the Agfa film went fine but Ilford Delta or the Retropan 320 did not work. Lomo Kino is a manual crank 2 perforations film camera. Fun but also very Lo'Fi.
I have had them on Youtube but limited viewers, Post it here as part of my LomoCameras.
Santa Monica Pier 09/12/2009 15h24
Stroling down the pier of Santa Monica. A bit off-season atmosphere at this moment of the year.
Santa Monica Pier
The Santa Monica Pier is located at the foot of Colorado Avenue in Santa Monica, California and is a prominent, 100-year-old landmark.
The pier contains Pacific Park, a family amusement park with a large Ferris wheel. It also has a carousel from the 1920s, an aquarium, shops, entertainers, an arcade, a trapeze school, a pub, and restaurants. The end of the pier is a popular location for anglers.
Santa Monica has had several piers over the years, however the current Santa Monica Pier is actually two adjoining piers that long had separate owners. The long, narrow Municipal Pier opened 9 September 1909, primarily to carry sewer pipes beyond the breakers, and had no amenities. The short, wide adjoining Pleasure Pier to the south, a.k.a. Newcomb Pier, was built in 1916 by Charles I. D. Looff and his son Arthur, amusement park pioneers.
[ Source and more information: Wikipedia - Santa Monica Pier ]