View allAll Photos Tagged SingleUse
Whole Roll Project - straight scans
Aug 2021
Bought two of these new single use cameras from Ilford Imaging. Blew through one testing it out.
Ilfocolor Rapid Retro Edition
Some kind of 400 speed Fuji color neg?, processed and scanned by Downtown Camera.
camera = Kodak Single Use Camera
film = Kodak 800 ISO film
photo = straight out of the film camera - no adjustments.
Mets 6 Dodgers 5
Attendance = 43,462 (103.7% full)
- camera = Single-Use Film Camera (brand unknown)
- ISO = 400
- game = 1999 National League Championship Series
- New York Mets (4) vs. Atlanta Braves (3) in 15 innings
- Time of Game: 5 hours 46 minutes
- Attendance: 55,723
Greenish blown glass perfume bottle in the form of a bird, with long tooled indents on the side of its body to represent plumage. An ancient form of single-use packaging, it was filled with perfume, then the tail was sealed by heating it in a flame; the tip of the tail had to be broken to remove the perfume (which has been done to this glass bird). They were obviously prized enough to be placed in women's tombs, to journey with their mistresses into the afterlife.
Roman, made in Italy
ca. 25-50 CE
British Museum (1878,1230.97)
Toronto, Canada. **Having a little fun with Domo-kun and the kissbots which Hilary Martin and others worked on for Nuit Blanche 2009.
The installation is "Public Display of Affection" which was displayed in Riverdale Park in Cabbagetown on October 3rd.
Kissbots are a single-minded, single-use bot. We have to work hard for them, applying lipstick, setting their catch, making the kiss sounds that light them up as they count to the prime number that triggers them. And then? They fall over, adding a kiss print to the collective array, generating a paper output of all that work.
Why do we work so hard for them? Because they can do what we Torontonians cannot: kiss in public. Lips by Pearl van Geest, circuit by David Ogborn, soundscape by Neil Wiernik, bots and installation by Hilary Martin. Bring your kisses, Toronto.
cabbagetownnuitblanche.wordpress.com/2009-artists/hilary-...
More on how this project all got started:
A team of activist Santas and elves descended upon Target’s headquarters and flagship store. The Greenpeace activists delivered two six-foot-tall stockings filled with hundreds of pieces of single-use plastic sold at Targets nationwide and a holiday wish list urging the company to end its reliance on throwaway plastic.
Hard to swallow. This syringe came to Midway in the stomach of an adult albatross which fed it to its chick.
All kinds of disposable plastic objects have become a fairly common ingredient in the 'diet' of this birds, including disposable syringes and razors. Fortunately the cap was on and protected the bird from its needle.
The Philippines-based non-profit and CCBO grantee, Communities Organized for Resource Allocation (CORA), helps to transform single-use plastics and other waste gathered at coastal clean-ups into new and recycled products to reduce plastics pollution in the Philippines and increase awareness in local communities.
Photo credit: CORA for Clean Cities, Blue Ocean
Dumfries, Kodak Fun Saver single use (with stock Kodak Gold 800). Processed and scanned by AG Photo Lab. August 2019
Unreal, but untouched photograph of an ethereal white tern fluttering inches away from Manuel Maqueda's lens
Towing a 'ghost net' (tangled derelict fishing gear) away from the coral. This one we managed to load aboard our boat and take ashore.