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Rijksmuseum Amsterdam

  

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I have a camera of mine own.... I have two lenses to see... no one can see through ma lens ! no one can know what I see ;)

  

Thank u Allah...

with some lunch at Prime Meats

Opened in 1938 on Sunset Blvd in Hollywood the Morgan Camera Shop was owned and operated by Gilbert Morgan. the shop was a full service camera store that sold cameras, lenses, film and pretty much anything to so with film photography and developing. The shop finally closed in the early 2000's and has sat vacant ever since and is a kind of sad standing fixture to a bygone era. Update: 2020 The Camera shop now looks very different it's been mostly painted over and you wouldn't know what the place had been.

 

Here's a link about the shop when it was in business: www.library.ucla.edu/blog/special/2017/04/18/the-morgan-c...

Here's my first underwater disposable camera which is waterproof up to 16 feet, shot from the other side. I'm planning to try it out soon with 17 exposures to use...watch this space to see the results!

 

www.clickasnap.com/kingsdavis

  

©Kings Davis 2023

 

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...is the one you have with you. --Chase Jarvis

 

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I ALWAYS have my iPhone with me--and it takes really great photos (see for yourself--I've posted several in the first comment below). Even though I may have just shocked many of you, including Hans, I count my iPhone as an integral part of my photography gear. I use it ALL THE TIME.

 

The photo above shows me focusing my iPhone (using noir mode) on a Canon lens. I took this photo (of me taking an iPhone photo) with my usual Macro Mondays go-to camera--a Canon 5D, Mark II with a 100 mm macro lens.

 

An amazing camera store in Chicago !

OK... I thought I'd post another shot of the flower below...

 

This is the flower before I was able to convince it to turn around and look at the camera...

 

Hehe

 

See... nothing to be shy about! Such a gorgeous flower! :)

Ilford FP4 Plus, 35mm

This is another much loved and well used 3D or stereo camera from my collection - the German built RBT X4 35mm film camera. It used a pair of Cosina 35 - 70mm zoom lenses linked beautifully together to perfectly match the aperture, focus and zoom, and it also had the ability to use both viewfinders to view in 3D what you were actually taking. Here it also has a matching pair of circular polarising filters which I had to line up manually in order to get them to match. Apart from the complex mechanical internals, it was a simple, good old fashioned fully manual camera with nothing more than a basic built in light meter.

 

It has had a hard life in my hands (as you can see!) as I put it to good use for a lot of years and it helped with my collection of 3D slides from our round Australia journey back in 2004 where it was used in conjunction with a pair of Canon SLR cameras. Sadly it is no longer working. No local camera repairers were game to pull it apart and have a look. It has a complex mechanism for winding on the film each time the shutter is pressed, and that seized up totally. It has to alternate between winding on one frame, then three frames in order to space the stereo pairs on the film and use all the frames with no gaps. I could have sent it back to the German manufacturer for repair, but a lot of extra expense was involved in that at a time when I was a little short of spare cash for such projects. As you can see, it has had a hard life, and is even held together on one of the lens linkages with a carefully reshaped paperclip which I used for an urgent repair when the original fell off somewhere near Albany in Western Australia! On our journey around Australia, it attracted a heap of attention from other tourists and even some local newspaper journalists in several areas. I recall a short article about it and me appearing in the local Alice Springs newspaper. Not a day went by on the trip without me explaining what it was to somebody, and I was always happy to talk about it. It was a really enjoyable camera to own and use.

So lucky to capture this swan that looked like it was trying to hide from the camera.

Zero Pinhole Camera

Delta 100 film/ D76

Lith Process

Kentmere VC Fineprint paper

Lens and dials of the No.1-A Autographic Kodak Jr.

The Radcliffe Camera(Camera, meaning "room" in Italian) is a building in Oxford, England, designed by James Gibbs in the English Palladian style and built in 1737–1749 to house the Radcliffe Science Library

Testing the robustness of my A99. It still works - the moisture in the damp grass didn't affect it at all.

Shot w/ my Single Use Lomochrome Purple 400 camera.

Canon Sure Shot Z135

Lomography X-Pro Chrome 100 (expired 2012 - developed in E6)

Washington Square Park, New York City

My dad bought himself a new Nikon and decided to give me his old one! :)

 

Explore #6 July 29 2014

Picture captured with the Lomo LC-A.

Bacardi Promotional Camera

24 exposures

Something unreadable is embossed around the lens.

No film expiration date shown.

 

Trying some new materials for camera straps and thought the arrangement of misc. tools with the side light looked cool. Taken with Voigtlander 35mm f/1.4 Nokton Classic.

Taken with disposable camera

Camera: Сontax RTS

Lens: Yashica ML 50 mm f/ 2

Scanning Film: Canon Canoscan 9000f Mark II

I got my new camera! It's a Canon 50D and i really love it :D

 

All the pictures are from a little trip I had with my friends Sarah and Mathilde. More to come!

 

(Explore: Highest position: 6 on Tuesday, June 23, 2009)

Here's the newest addition to my Mini Camera series! The SLR (Single Lens Reflex) was the camera standard for professional photographers before the onset of digital imaging, using film to capture a photo.

 

And speaking of film, well… this model's got a fun secret that I'll share with you tomorrow. :)

 

Building guide coming November 3!

 

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A few of my babies....

 

Can you name them all without looking at the tags?

A camera lens makes the magic of a picture, so it's only fitting that it as it's own picture taken...

I had a glorious work week at the State Museum in Alaska. All the people who work there are interesting, charming people. I spent one day in their collection storage area counting, measuring and photographing cabinets. This little camera stole my heart. I wonder what it saw in the early 1900s in Alaska.

Copyright - Kodak, Rochester, NY 1913

For Todd and Billy

Have a Beautiful Day Flickr Friends

 

#company #MacroMondays #theme #lens #camera #vintage #45mm #retinette #1a

So I was setting up some black paper around my lamps to see if I could reduce the light they emit to a single pin light, so I could try to emulate traditional portrait photography light settings on action figures and such.

 

I ended up unintentionally creating a camera obscura effect - that shape on the ground is an image of the light bulb inside the lamp!

Shot with canon rp and 24-105f4L. Camera to the right and just above using a a flash bender flash grid.

The front of a vintage box camera Daci Royal.

I inherited the camera from my father, who (afaik) bought it when he was a young man.

Some decades ago i even shot some black and white 6x6cm pictures with it on 120 film. :)

 

For the image i shone a red LED light through the 90° reflective viewfinder above the lens.

Camera: Canon EOS Elan II E

Lens: Helios 44М-6 58 mm f/2 MC

Scanning Film: Canon Canoscan 9000f Mark II

An old friend I have had since the mid 1960's. My first "serious" camera that I purchased from a friend's dad for $20. A circa 1952 Praktica single lens reflex with the venerable 50mm f2.8 Zeiss Tessar Jena pre-set lens. Shutter speeds from 1/2 second to 1/500th. No light meters, instant return mirrors or automatic stop-down apertures on this baby. It introduced me to the wonderful worlds of macro, telephoto, street, and astrophotography. She still works as well as the day I got her. Replaced in 1969 with the Canon FT-QL my brother brought me back from his tour in Vietnam. The greatest gift I ever received. Now this fine old Praktica just looks at me from a shelf. Kind of sad, really.

Camera: Olympus mju II

Film: Silberra PAN160

Scanning Film: Canon Canoscan 9000f Mark II

The Radcliffe Camera built in 1737-1749 as Oxford's science library, is closed to the public making it one of the most mysterious of all Oxford's distinctive landmarks.

EXPLORE !!! #154# JAN.20, 2014 ! THANK YOU!!!!

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