View allAll Photos Tagged ViewFinder

I used to shoot through the viewfinder all the time, now I use the screen on the back of the camera more often. I use it when I can't even see it -- the X100V lets you take a photo using it as a touch screen, which can be helpful when making self portraits.

The distant Philadelphia skyline as seen through the very top of the Tacony Palmyra Bridge

A few more of Aspen.

 

The lovely Shannon Taylor told me how to find these textures. LOVE

Bored, I took a picture of my Kodac Brownies viewfinder and played with some old pics

Two tourists enjoy the views of the Katsuren peninsula from Katsuren-jo, also called the "Ocean Gusuku", a castle belonging to the UNESCO World Heritage designated Castles of the Ryukyu Kingdom.

I discovered a group on flickr that involves using a viewfinder of another camera to frame a shot....

 

I used my Polaroid Autofocus 660 for the lens....

My boss gave me this, from a friend's yard sale. She thought I might like it as shelf decoration. I just so happened to have a roll of 620 film, and I'm gonna give this old Kodak a dance before I shelf it.

The '63 Thunderbird tail light was designed to resemble a turbine afterburner.

I would have actually installed the afterburners as traffic-tamers, but that's just me..

how things have moved on , this is the tiny viewfinder of a Kodak No2 autographic folding camera looking at a Christmas tree ,its a bit useless to be honest lol.

Nice when your viewfinder is as big and fat as this one.

 

My two best buddies - Olympus OM1 looking through the Pentacon Six. Rad. Almost took a photo of both with my phone, but that would be ridiculous.

  

This is my 16-year old son, Ishan, last winter, in Rajasthan, India, looking at something through the viewfinder of his DLSR. At that time, after trying to get some sunset shots, I ran out of disk space on my card. Transferring the images on the card to the Wolverine storage was going to take over thirty minutes. So, I realized that my shooting for the day was over. It was then that I took out my point and shoot (a Canon Powershot SD770 IS) and took this photo of him.

 

After looking at the photo later, I had a feeling that's very hard to describe; he seems like a grown-up, an independent photographer with an artistic sense of his own. As a dad, I don't think I have quite had the opportunity of thinking of him that way until now.

 

ON BLACK, this looks much better.

Sankt Peter-Ording, Hasselblad 501 cm

© Jeff R. Clow

 

When this friendly mantis jumped on the lens and I handed the camera to my wife so I could take this shot.....I realized immediately that I was looking at a moment that could easily be described as once in a lifetime.

 

View Larger On Black

by the lake on a mid April day

We bring to photography many expectations and assumptions of what the image 'should' be like. I want to play with these assumptions. Here there appears to be information missing but can we use our imaginations to fill in the gaps? How much information can be taken away before the image is useless? If this seems exaggerated, think of a black and white photo, this is a process of discarding the color information from the image.

 

What we need to realise is that our perceptions of the world are always filtered anyway and what we think we see and know isn't always true but merely our attempt to make the world the way that makes sense to us.

 

More often we want to see what is there rather than what is not there. Many of my images in general play with the idea of negative space - or what is not there. Rather that seeing the leaves on the tree, try to see the spaces between.

 

I am interested in the philosophy of images and our perception of the world. Here, and with some of my recent images, I am attempting to understand more and experiment with image-making.

Went out yesterday and picked off some raspberries in our garden.

 

Highest position: 258 on Saturday, August 3, 2013

 

Teatro Nacional Miguel Angel Asturias, Guatemala

 

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Done for a collaboration ages ago and I only just found it.

 

ViewMaster reel

Polaroid

600

Taken with the LX2... ironically.

 

I was lucky enough to have a Yashica viewfinder lying around.

 

More here

Bonnie, the Folding Brownie six-20 seen through the viewfinder of Clyde, the Argus Argoflex seventy five.

 

I hope you're all having a great Sunday! :)

I wonder what my grandfather's camera has seen. I'm still contemplating if I should fix this medium format film camera that we've kept for a few years.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

taken with a nikon through the viewfinder of a kodak duaflex.

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Amelia with my Voigtlander Bessa T.. sadly with parallax issues where the hotshoe viewfinder showed Amelia in the centre of the frame! At least it's good to know for future use. :)

 

I've added lots of new exciting content to Patreon including money saving tips which will easily cover the cost of the pledge - www.patreon.com/mrleicacom

 

Voigtlander Bessa T + Leica Macro-Elmar-M 90mm f4 + 85mm hotshoe viewfinder + Fomapan 100

 

Developing - 1:3 Xtol + Rodinal 2.5ml/L, 12min at 21 degrees, 3Iv, Epson v800 scan

 

the water is delicious...

 

: )

Got this at an Estate sale for $5, it came with a Hoya UV filter. It's filthy but it works, the meter needs attention though.

Denver, CO - This was taken from the top of the Denver Art Museum. The area you see here is the Civic Center Park, a 12-acre park that according to the city anchors culture, commerce and government.

 

Speaking of government, the building to the far upper right is the capital building. It was built in 1894 and the copper top was installed in 1908 to commemorate the Colorado Gold Rush.

 

While we are here the Greek Amphitheater located on the lower right was built in 1919. If you follow the walking path to the upper far left that structure is the Voorhies Memorial. Dedicated to John Voorhies, a successful minor who left his fortune to the city.

 

We hope you enjoyed the ride, please note when exiting, the platform you are standing on is moving at the same speed as the ride vehicle.

  

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