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20220412_Yoshi_YoshiTheEurasian
thanks nerderella for uploading your yoshimoto pictures :)
we went there last october and i was very happy to see paintings by him.
yoshimoto nara and hiroshi sugito is my favorite artist duo.
i loooooove their art, the way they use the colours and the expressions of the psycho kids
Sorry if my posts seems a bit messed up I'm trying to use ifttt to repost my Instagram pix and may be doing the settings wrong lol
Yoshi sculpture from Yoshi's Island for the Super Nintendo, one of my favorite video games ever.
Built for MocAthalon 2013 on MOCPages.
LEGO Yoshi ( 80 cm high ) is only slightly taller than Yoshi ( 77 cm ). In terms of volume however I think he's almost twice as big as the plumber.
feel free to watch, rate, comment or share the construction video :
Los Angeles Zoo - Los Angeles, California - Yoshi the chimpanzee was born at the Los Angeles Zoo on 7/2/90 to Regina and Judeo. Her mother, Regina, still lives at the Los Angeles Zoo. Her father passed away on 7/26/06.
Yoshi is the mother of Uki, who was born on 3/8/13.
".... A camera maker that simply copies others' idea has no right to call itself an original maker in the first place." - Mr. Yoshihisa Maitani , creator of the Olympus OM system.
Yoshihisa Maitani was the brilliant head of the Olympus design team which gave us some of the most innovative cameras in history. The 3 milestones that stand out are the Pen half frame cameras (of the 1960’s), the OM series SLRs (from 1973 onwards) and the compact XA capsule or "clam-shell" cameras (from 1979).
Shown here are my OM 1n (right) and OM 3 (left), two totally mechanical SLRs where the battery is only required for the meter. All the shutter speeds work mechanically and without any battery dependence.
When the OM1 was introduced in 1973, it took the photography world by storm. It was small, elegant, rugged and beautifully designed. It was the Leica of the SLR world. In fact, the camera was originally called the M1 but after a protest from Leica (who, of course, produced the M series rangefinder cameras), the name was changed to OM1. It had a mechanical shutter up to 1/1000 sec, a very large uncluttered viewfinder, mirror-up facility, self timer, DOF preview and a simple match-needle metering system. Even today, the OM1 has an enthusiastic following. In an internet camera review site (where users wrote reviews and rated cameras), the OM1 was voted number one 35mm camera with Canon T90 in second place. One internet reviewer called it “God’s camera.” The subsequent OM2 and variants were similar to the OM1 but the shutter required batteries (except on bulb setting); they also had an aperture priority mode and the metering was more sophisticated.
The OM3 shown here came out in 1984 and was the natural successor of the OM1, again having a completely mechanical shutter; this time the fastest speed was 1/2000 sec. The metering in the OM3 was vastly improved and included a (multi) spot mode and highlight/shadow adjustments. Sadly, the mirror-up and self timer were removed. The OM3’s were made in small numbers and command a high price on the second hand market compared to the “cheap as chips” OM1’s. There was also an OM4 which actually came out a year before the OM3. The OM4 was similar to the OM3 but had aperture priority and only the 1/60 sec shutter speed worked without a battery.
The last genuine OM SLR cameras were titanium versions of the OM3 and OM4. The OM dynasty came to an end in 2002.
[Picture taken with a Canon 5dmk2 and 35mm f1.4L lens]