View allAll Photos Tagged SingleUse
Single-Use Camera "Party Camera Indoor & Outdoor 27 Exposures ISO 400"
A recycled body of a Konica Film-in Neo Flash 27, fitted in China with a new AAA cell and reloaded with ASA 400 film stock. Expiry April 2012.
Sold in Australia by the department store BigW (Woolworths Chain)
Image shot with an Olympus Stylus TG-3.
© Dirk HR Spennemann 2014, All Rights Reserved
Access all my images via the Collections Page
Birdoswald Roman fort, Cumbria. 31st May 2014. Disposable Kodak FunSaver camera. Film marked Kodak GT 800-5. C41 processed and scanned at ASDA.
Single-Use Camera "Party Camera Indoor & Outdoor 27 Exposures ISO 400"
A recycled body of a Konica Film-in Neo Flash 27, fitted in China with a new AAA cell and reloaded with ASA 400 film stock. Expiry April 2012.
Sold in Australia by the department store BigW (Woolworths Chain)
Image shot with an Olympus Stylus TG-3.
© Dirk HR Spennemann 2014, All Rights Reserved
Access all my images via the Collections Page
Greenpeace USA activist Megan Weeks stands with a costumed 'polar bear' at Coca-Cola headquarters while delivering the message that more than 585,000 people want the company to abandon single-use plastics.Greenpeace launched a global campaign spanning five continents on Coke in 2017. Greenpeace is urging the company to phase out throwaway plastic, introduce reusable containers and innovative delivery systems, and ensure that all remaining packaging is 100 percent recycled.
Single-Use Camera "Party Camera Indoor & Outdoor 27 Exposures ISO 400"
A recycled body of a Konica Film-in Neo Flash 27, fitted in China with a new AAA cell and reloaded with ASA 400 film stock. Expiry April 2012.
Sold in Australia by the department store BigW (Woolworths Chain)
Image shot with an Olympus Stylus TG-3.
© Dirk HR Spennemann 2014, All Rights Reserved
Access all my images via the Collections Page
After WWII some of the lessons, discoveries, and expectations for mass producing and distributing, single-use convenience, and pace of life carried over from the War Effort to the flood of pent-up consumer demand, demobilized troops used to quick pace, individual servings, and rapid discard for high mobility. Now three or more generations after that surge of disposability, it is worldwide almost without exception. "Consumer" and consumerism has been viewed as a good thing; the basis for economic activity (trending from durable goods to consumable ones, then to intangible services). And yet it is not sustainable. There is only so much storage land for burying all this packaging and half-eaten or drunk foods. Whether it is fossil fuel burned, clean air and water dirtied, habitat paved over, prime agricultural land converted to burial ground or landfill, there is only so much on the planet. Now is the time to revise the assumptions: let buyers get their own containers.
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Isaboa - Alaska
hatcher pass
Start: rhythmdev9 Posted
midi-chlorinated Posted
AsStarsGoOut Posted
kevinwells Posted
Isaboa Printed! Alaska!
The travelling camera club is an on going art project devoted to sharing a snapshot of our world. We post disposable camera's to a group of people all around the world, each person gets 5 photos then posts the camera onto the next person in the route.
Eventually the camera will make it back to the travelling camera club H.Q where it will get developed and the photos will be put online for everyone to see.
If you'd like to take part drop us an email at travellingcameraclub@googlemail.com
Telling us your name
Address
if you'd be willing to ship internationally
if you'd be willing to buy a camera
travellingcameraclub.tumblr.com/
Stanwix, Carlisle. May 2014Ilford HP5+ single use camera. Flash used. Processed and scanned by Ilford Labs Direct
Actress and director Bonnie Wright (R-center) joined Greenpeace USA activists including Kate Melges (R) at Coca-Cola headquarters to deliver the message accepted by Coca-Cola Communications Director Ann Moore (L) and Senior Director of Environmental Policies Ben Jordan (L-center) that more than 585,000 people want the company to abandon single-use plastics. Greenpeace launched a global campaign spanning five continents on Coke in 2017. Greenpeace is urging the company to phase out throwaway plastic, introduce reusable containers and innovative delivery systems, and ensure that all remaining packaging is 100 percent recycled.