View allAll Photos Tagged Slide
• Canon AE-1 Program
• 50mm f1.4
• shot on Polaroid PolaChrome 35mm Slide Film (expired 1997)
• ISO 40
• Developed in a Polaroid Auto Processor.
Found Ektachrome slide dated August 1979 showing the bride and groom (with the bride changed out of her wedding dress).
Grey day, but a quick trip to the fair grounds to try out the Olympus E-1. The colors are very much what I've been looking for! Rich but not unrealistic, helping to tell the story.
I don't think I've ever captured the essence of a slide tackle quite as well as I did here. I can't remember either of the kids involved, but it's another of my favorite photos.
(track they roll on was custom made with bumpers at the ends to stop the doors from sliding off, hardware was standard barn door wheels from Wilco)
Sliding on a concrete slab in a pool for drunkin' fun. We started to get an audiance. Probably around 20 people at its peak. Resulted in a bunch of pink bellies.
Found unbranded and undated slide manually labelled "Debbie", showing what looks like a picnic in some rugged terrain.
---- from chaos some my black and white demons .... ----
---- dal kaos alcuni miei demoni in bianco e nero .... ----
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------
A young member of the community enjoys spaghetti and meatballs at Sliders restaurant, 305 Limestone Terrace in Jarrell, Texas, just off of I-35 exit 275 and right behind the McDonalds. Open seven days a week for breakfast, lunch and dinner - all are welcome to stop by and visit or call 512-746-2211 for curbside pick up.
This is a slide scan from a slide made by my dad during our holiday trip from germany to Malaga/Spain (2500 km) in 1972. The Window has been broken near to Barcelona and we found very nice spanish guys to repair the window.
The effect is done by coinicidence - pushed a shortcut in irfanView and was so happy with the result :-) Love the "green" lights on the cars. Effect is "Inverse Colour"
pictionid72661860 - catalog07.01.a-00334 - titleantonov colt an-2 reads chino 21 may 89. - filename07.01.a-00334.jpg -Image scanned from a 35mm Slide--Please tag this photo so that the data can be stored with our Digital Asset Management System. -Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
Farragut Square, K Street, Washington, D.C.
I bought this camera to evaluate whether it could be a suitable replacement for my finicky Leica iiib. Unfortunately, at the moment, I just don’t have a lot of 35mm film, and not any BW that I wanted to waste as a tester. So I used my last two rolls of very expired Ektachrome and developed them in Rodinal stand. Nearly all of these shots are 1/8-1/30 at ISO70, so mostly 2.8/4/5.6 in cloudy weather.
It’s a very neat camera and it works well, but I’ve decided that it doesn’t suit my needs.
Zeiss Ikon Contaflex Super, Kodak Ektachrome (E6, expired 2006), Rodinal 1:100 stand development 1 hour
Found Kodachrome slide, date not legible, showing empty tables and chairs outside a bar or restaurant.
Found Kodachrome slide dated April 1971 showing an adult and two children playing on rocks at the seaside.
sliding shower door rollers and other hardware
contact Lily exp01@shjianmei.com to get detailed information if you interested in this kind of products!!
Found Kodachrome slide dated October 1976 showing Hereford Cathedral. Some interesting vehicles of the period in the foreground - a 2-door Morris Marina, a Hillman Hunter and a Ford Capri. And a blue van that I think is a Commer. I had three Marinas at various times (COL 737K, OAX 86M and AUH 440T), but they were all 4-door versions.
Slide 04: Closing livestock yield gaps in the developing world: Imperatives for people and the planet, slide presentation made by ILRI director general Jimmy Smith at the Global Food Security Consortium Spring Symposium on 'Closing the Yield Gap', 29-30 Apr 2014, in Ames, Iowa (photo credit: ILRI).
Titles and dates are from the slides, they may have been taken well before the stamped dates of course.
Attaching a slider to a tripod head at the center point of the slider isn't stable enough to prevent the camera from dipping down when it reaches either end of the slider under the weight of the camera.
I solved this problem by simply attaching a cheap monopod under the one end (using a quick release plate) and then I stabilize it even more by weighing the same end down with my camera bag – the bag's shoulder strap hanging on the end doesn't obstruct the camera sliding on the track.
This keeps the slider stabilized through the entire movement; you can still tilt the slider in multiple angles, setup is fast, and doesn't involve toting any additional heavy support stands around when needing to travel light. The monopod already travels with me. I attached a shoulder sling to both ends of the monopod that allows me to use the monopod as a type of video stabilizer/glidecam when moving around.
I would prefer a smaller head on the slider that sits lower with a wider base for stability but I already had this head from an old broken tripod.