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De filmhallen are an arthouse cinema built in a former tramdepot. On show are two beautiful old projectors.
Shot in the abandoned School of Moss in Croatia. Once a communist school, nature is now taking over again.
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The opening is this weekend--
if you're in or around Ohio, go see!
Dark Crystals
Sarah Coleman, Eli Stertz, Brandi Strickland, Brook Caballero and Petersen Thomas
February 6–28, 2009
Opening Reception and Gallery Hop:
Saturday, February 7th, 6–10pm
www.mahangallery.com | ph: 614.294.3278 | 717 n. high street, columbus, oh 43215
Projector lenses are quite fun to use, but with no focusing part, they are a bit difficult to handle.
My lens (a Liesegang Sankar 85mm f/2.5) has a nice long flange distance, which gives me some room betweeen the lens body and the camera mount to place an M42-E adapter, the lens is niclely fitted in a M42-flat ring (then screwed on the adapter). That M42-E adapter includes a focusing helicoid wich makes focusing then possible ! I can still add extension tubes if the minimal flange distance is still too short (I actually have one here).
It goes without saying that using a mirrorless camera makes everything a lot simpler because you have a short flange distance to begin with, much shorter than most of the 35mm film projector lenses (except if their body extends far behind the actual rear element...).
Picture taken with my Sony A68 / Carl Zeiss Jena Pancolar 50mm f/1.8
Movie projector above the main hall in an abandoned tbc sanatorium.Of the total of 30000 patients that came to this place, 15000 of them died here. Huge interesting place.
Swedish tour 2014 together with Juha and OlavXO. Total mileage on this trip was about 2500 km.
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Strobist info: A Quantaray PZ-1 set to manual mode was fired manually during the long exposure, bounced off of the place where the wall and ceiling meet, behind, above, and to the left of the camera.
From the 1930's Hollywood lighting demo I did for Holmes Chapel Camera Club - Hollywood glamour with speedlights !
3xNikon SB900. Snoots of various types - Rogue Flashbender XL on the key light, Interfit Strobies snoot on the hair light.
The background is projected through a Nikon 20mm AIS lens using a Lightblaster. The patterns is produced by a gobo inside the Lightblaster.
B&W conversion - default setting in Silver Efex Pro 4
Model: Paris Honour
Makeup and Hair by model
WEEK 39 – Southaven Malco (Saturday Matinee)
Another goal of mine, I should note, was to finally get this set uploaded – I’ve been sitting on some of these pictures for years! That’s a good thing in some ways, though; it has allowed me to slowly add several other photos to the set, for example.
I was originally inspired – long ago, now – to photograph my local theater after viewing the stream of our resident theater aficionado, andsome96. Out his way there are major theater chains, but here in the Memphis area, Malco rules. Not that Malco isn’t a chain, of course; to the contrary, they have 36 locations in six states (read more about their history here). But Malco is only a regional player, not a national one. National theater chains have largely avoided Memphis, and for good reason: Malco is the true powerhouse here. (Incidentally, “Malco Powerhouse” is actually the name of their newest cinema, haha!)
We’re looking here at the very cool projector neon that is located in the theater’s lobby, directly inside – and above – the entrances. I think this shot turned out pretty nicely!
I don’t *think* this would’ve been removed with the renovation, but anything is possible, I suppose. Still, the lobby décor has survived largely untouched over the years, so I kinda doubt anything has been done with this. I certainly hope not, anyway! They’d have to be crazy to remove this, right?
(c) 2020 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
I chose this because I was brought up in school using nothing but overhead projectors to be taught in class. The evolution from this to now smart boards is incredible.
Another shot from my projected portrait from today. I actually like this shot better but it doesn't have my user name on it like the other.
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Nick Layton © 2012 All rights reserved.
Here's a little interesting light experiment if you fancy trying something unusual. Take an old projector and angle close to, but not pointing at camera. Take a silver reflector and reflect part of the light onto the face of your subject. If you reflect all, you'll blind your subject and possibly over expose her. Add a wisp of cigarette smoke if you so desire (smoking is very bad for you!). You can add a back portable strobe to the back of the model's head (like a Canon 430EZ) set to very low power (1/32 - as I did) for an extra touch.