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I've had doing a picture like this in my head for a long time since I came across this camera at a used items store.
When I walked into this store I thought the guy behind the counter would either try to sell me Gizmo or that by the time I reached the back of the store a man eating plant would try and eat me. When neither of these things happened I was more at ease to look through all the stuff they had and came across this little camera for a very low prize.
Someone's garbage might be another one's treasure!
Info: Canon 7D | 50mm @ (ƒ/1.4) | ƒ1.4 | ISO 100 | 1/400s
You say tomato, I say Yamato (of Japan) A wide angle photo exaggerates the size of the viewfinder, but just a little. It was also sold by Sears.
Burial Marker with the emblem of
the Hyderabad Infantry
(Burial of Clerk A.G.Samuel )
Kranji War Memorial
(克兰芝阵亡战士公坟, Tanah Perkuburan Perang Kranji)
9 Woodlands Road
Singapore
The memorial and cemetery is dedicated to the men and women from Australia, Canada, India, Malay(si)a, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, and the United Kingdom, who died defending Singapore and Malaya against the invading Japanese forces during World War II. The cemetery, which is is maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. contains the graves of 4,458 allied servicemen (over 850 of whom are unidentified).
Through-the-Viewfinder image taken with the NikΩmega TTV 910 camera.
© Dirk HR Spennemann 2011, All Rights Reserved
Wray Optical Works
Wray Universal Viewfinder
Settings for 35mm; 50mm; 73mm; 90mm;135mm
Parallax error correction
Metal
Copy of the Leitz VIOOH
It should be pointed out that this is not a poorer quality alternative to the Leitz VIOOH. It would have, however, sold for a lower price in Britain and the Commonwealth than it's Leitz equivalent because there would have been no import duty to pay.
Fits to the accessory shoe.
It has its own accessory shoe.
Parallax error correction is by means of a lever at the base of the viewfinder. You set the distance your object (if it is nearer than 4m) is in front of your camera and the viewfinder tilts forward to "centre" the image. Interestingly for a British built accessory this distance scale in marked off in metres
There is only one viewfinder. The photograph shows the same one from four different angles.
Reflector is one of THE most popular requests I get. I wanted to modernize the Generation 1 toy, but put the Generation 1 cartoon feel to him/them. Sort of a "hybrid" of G1 cartoon fused with the G1 Toy. Reflector now has tons of details and articulation
New features/articulation/point of interest:
- New heads
- Shoulder articulation
- Elbow articulation
- Wrist articulation
- Hand articulation (Spyglass)
- Hip articulation
- Knee articulation
- Glass lens on Viewfinder has hologram Decepticon faction symbol inside it
- Alt mode (camera) has light up lens
Transform and combine all 3 robots to form "camera" mode. Perfect for spying on Autobots.
Debatable "Masterpiece Class" considering he scales well with several Masterpiece figures (see images)
I have a new toy =D
This will be the last photo for a while until I get my first roll of film developed.
It's not going to take long - already took half a roll today xD
Sony DSC-RX100M3
One of my 'street' cameras cool and compact. Fits in the pocket or any small bag. Standout feature of the Sony camera is the built-in electronic viewfinder. Also has a tilt out LCD screen. A tilt up flash that's very helpful Excellent high ISO performance.
Sharp, wide aperture lens. Nice images. Get when you don't want to carry the heavy SLR
A folding roll film camera dated from 1937 to 1939. Kodak Anastigmat 102mm f/6.3 lens (Cooke Triplet). No.1 Kodex shutter with 1/25, 1/50, 1/100, B, and T settings. Aperture from f/6.3 to f/32. Folding out view finder.
A viewfinder from a studio camera from school
Press L on your keyboard for the full experience!
Canon 5D
Canon 50mm f/1.4
Mode Av | iso 1000 | @1.4 | 1/1000 | @50mm
Leica IIIc Rangefinder Camera
This camera has a history and then some.
My Father (UH!) "liberated" it during WW II. He used it initially to take photos during the fighting. Many appear in the history of the 272nd Battle Axe Regiment.
Regiment History:
69th-infantry-division.com/histories/272.html
WW II Photos:
www.flickr.com/photos/97578613@N08/sets/72157641374494255
After the war, Dad returned to civilian life and apparently pursued a photography careers as a side line. When the Korean War broke out, he was reactivated and served in Japan.
After Korea, he continued to do photography. As long as I can remember, he was taking photos as we grew up. He only set it aside in the mid-1980s when I gave him an Olympus OM-2N.
This is the first 35 mm camera I used. I had a GAF 100 FX for many years beforehand, but this was the first "real" camera I used. As you can tell by the photos that I ahve posted here, it really started something. :-)
Some related links:
Leica IIIc
web2.ph.utexas.edu/~yue/misc/LeicaLTM.html
Canon Serenar Lenses:
www.canon.com/camera-museum/history/canon_story/1946_1954...
Russian "plastic fantastic" - a little viewfinder camera that also happened to be my first camera a long, long time ago. See Smena 8m for more info.
The Hassie has a really neat kind of viewfinder that actually gives you a three dimensional image. There is a translucent plate that the SLR mirror projects directly on to.
This is one of two viewfinders for the Hassie. This one is much more powerful (and in 3d, so it's startlingly better than modern viewfinders for precise focus), but it is very subject to glare and thus not practical to use while walking around.
Summer Jones and Trystan Merrick, shot in San Diego, California, April 24, 2010.
Technology: TTV (through the viewfinder) with a kodak duaflex and a Canon 5D Mark II
Looking through an AE-1, Shutter Priority fullframe film camera. Shutter speed is set to 1/500 sec. So that drops my aperture to 1.4-1.8 for a correct exposure.
TtV does have it's limitations and a dirty viewfinder meant that I have just spent well over an hour cleaning up this image then adding a slight colour tint to it. That said it's pretty much as i saw it, particularly the banding of sea and sky and that i chose to include only a small band of sea and the horizon.
ViewFinders_Overseas_Outing Aug 2010- Jakarta --> Surabaya --> Bromo --> Solo --> Jogjakarta
Ijen Crater
The most amazing Indonesian volcano is Ijen Crater or Kawah Ijen (2,600m or 8,660ft tall), the "Green Crater" from Eastern Java, which has a lake made of 36 million cubic meters representing a solution of sulfuric acid and hydrogen chloride, the most powerful existing acids.
On the edges of the lake, the fumaroles (volcanic gas eruptions) depose 4 tonnes of sulfur daily. Such acid lakes are also found on the volcanoes Kusatsu-Shirane (Japan) and Poas (Costa Rica), but the Indonesian lake is by far the largest acid lake on Earth, having a maximum depth of 212m (706ft). These lakes result from the mix of rainfall water with gases coming from the depths of the volcano.
Kawah Ijen is the world's largest highly acidic lake and is the site of a labor-intensive sulfur mining operation in which sulfur-laden baskets are hand-carried from the crater floor.
Many other post-caldera cones and craters are located within the caldera or along its rim. The largest concentration of post-caldera cones forms an E-W-trending zone across the southern side of the caldera. Coffee plantations cover much of the Ijen caldera floor, and tourists are drawn to its waterfalls, hot springs, and dramatic volcanic scenery.
The walls of the Kawah Ijen lake are light ocher, but the water has a turquoise color, with emerald reflexes. The temperature of the water is of 34o C, and sulfur bubbles float on the surface. The surroundings are covered by a sulfur powder. The smell is pungent and irritating, filled with sulfur dioxide. From place to place, sulfur pours at a temperature of 12ca0o C, like bright red trails, which gradually solidify, turning lemon yellow. The lake contains 600,000 tonnes of hydrogen chloride, 550,000 tonnes of sulfuric acid, 200,000 tonnes of aluminium sulphate and 170,000 tonnes of iron sulphate.
People from the neighboring area extract sulfur from the crater manually. Each worker can transport 40 to 70kg (90 to 155 pounds) at once on the abrupt slopes of the volcano, using bamboo ladders where the slope is too steep. In one day, a man can carry up to 360 kg (750 pounds) of sulfur. The daily production of the exploitation is just of 4 tonnes, a derisory quantity, if we consider the fact that the crater harbors 30,000 tonnes of sulfur. Industrial exploitation of the lake has not been planned so far, as the volcano erupts from time to time, projecting acid to the height of 600 m (2,000 ft) and splashing the neighboring areas with a corrosive rain.
It's mid November and there is little life on the allotment. Crops have ripened and been picked, the earth dug over and all will be quiet until the spring, when it will become a hive of activity again. This was taken by a digital Canon through a lens of an old duaflex 120 camera.
Check out the groups that this in in to find out more.