View allAll Photos Tagged camera+,
Taking a step back and enjoying the scenery while I program a time-lapse city shoot. Motorola Atrix 2. Sony SLT a35 being held on a carbon fiber tripod and using a remote switch.
Pyramid cam tracing a solargraph today.
Top half as it came out the camera bottom half rearranged in order.
Taken with a Nikonos underwater film camera, I'll be trying again in a couple weeks, so comments of what we did well or what we could improve would be great
6×7 strut folding camera with a coupled rangefinder.
Originally, PLAUBEL was a German company, a Japanese company Doi group purchased it in 1975.
We had lunch with him yesterday, he brought the old camera.
プラウベル マキナ67
折りたたみ式の中判カメラ。
Canon PowerShot G7
Self Portrait...
I used this great texture from Playingwithbrushes
www.flickr.com/photos/playingwithpsp/2559197954/
Explore #312 but dropped :(
The first Yashica Electro 35 camera was introduced in 1966 . It is a range finder camera . A number of cameras with that name appeared since then, with various suffixes . One of these is the Yashica Electro 35 MC in 1972. (according to a Dutch ad MC should stand for 'mini computer' , but possibly it just stands for 'manual choice'(of focus) ?) This camera is a simplified version with a zone focusing scale .
Today, i went to the biggest photo/camera store in Quebec(Montreal)..no need to name it, everybody here knows it... and the other ones, who cares.... But the counter where they sell expensives lenses had one of my hummingbird shot in background on the computor... yep very flattering but also very scary... so now on all my photos that are nice will have my logo in it. hey! it is copyright, If you want to use it, you have to ask!!! They are cool at the store..., but i will prevent some damage before it happen... too bad, i hate when i see logos on photos.. but i have no choice..
This is a unmature male...
I lost this on my birthday in July. Cammie came up to me a couple weeks ago and says "Here Mommy". And boom, there is my Camera necklace out of nowhere
One of my favorites, such detail in the set... video cassette, disposable camera, and old-school film cartridge!
Homemade camera format 6/12
Schneider Kreuznach super angulon 47xl , fixed focus at hyper focal, viewfinder with smartphone app.
see also folder/album selfmade camera
押入れ整理していたら出て来ました。こんなの持っているの忘れていました。就職してすぐに買ったような記憶が蘇ってきました。付いていたレンズは隣に置いてあるZoom-NIKKOR 35-105mm F3.5-4.5。こんなの持ってたなら子どもの写真はこれで撮ればよかったのに・・・持っていることをすっかり忘れていて殆ど使ってません。電池を買ってきて入れたら露出計は動きました。ファインダーを覗くとぽちぽちとゴミが見えるけれどデジカメじゃないから大丈夫でしょうか?蓋を開けてみると遮光用黒スポンジが劣化して剥落しています。使えるかな?
Camera : canon 500D
Lens : Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro
Aperture : f/10
Shutter speed : 1/200
ISO Speed : 800
Just got it today...
A gift from my precious family.
This Picture is © Copyrighted.
Please contact me if you wish to use any of my Photos.
This is my LEGO idea and creation for LEGO CUUSOO.
please visit my project page and surpport if you interested in.
the address is here:
Rangefinder camera with automatic exposure , for 35mm film ; released in 1961 .
Ad from Dutch photomagazine .
Got my old Fred Flintstone camera out for World Toy Camera Day 2014. Actually it is the first time I have shot with it. I had to reload 35mm film into a 126 cassette to have something to expose in it. Images to follow........maybe....... the back popped open twice, hoping for just one.
You think it is hard enough to get any respect shooting film, try shooting with Fred.
Together with Elvera, Sabine, Maaike and Sanne i started a 52 project. Every week someone from the group comes up with a new theme and we'll all take a picture for it :)
Theme: Obsession.
My new camera ring! <3 the thing.
♥
Copyright © 2010 Lizet Beek photography & graphic design. All rights reserved
Japanese Field Camera
Special Thin Portable Camera (特別製薄形携帯用暗函)
Cherry wood and brass, about 1910 (1894-1919)
The camera bears the ivory (or bone) name plate "Manufactory | R. Konishi | Tokyo, & Osaka, Japan"
Format: kabine (カビネ) (12 x 16.5 cm)
Double extension. Reversible dry-plate holders.
Lens: Wollensak Versar Portrait & View 5 x 7 f6
Shutter: Thornton - Pickard rouleau shutter (in front of the lens)
© Dirk HR Spennemann 2010, All Rights Reserved
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The following quote is from the Camerapedia page for Rokuoh-Sha :
"Early cameras were produced by artisan subcontractors, such as Hasegawa Toshinosuke (長谷川利之助) and Tōjō Kamejirō (東条亀次郎). The company (Honten Konishi Rokuemon, 本店小西六右衞門) founded a manufacturing branch called Rokuoh-sha (六桜社) in 1902, and released the Cherry in 1903, the first Japanese camera to have a brand name. The factory of Hasegawa Toshinosuke became the wood workshop of Rokuoh-sha in 1906. Most of the camera production was still assumed by other subcontractors, many of which were merged into Rokuoh-sha in 1919."
Given the maker's plate R.Konishi, it is certain that the camera dates to pre 1919. While the camera has some similarity with the field cameras produced by Rokuoh-sha for the Japanese Navy in the late 1920s and 1930s, all of these Navy cameras use Hexar Series I lenses, and the design of the front standard is very different. The camera shown above has clear design similarities with an Asanuma King. This is not surprising, however, if we consider that the artisan Tōjō Kamejirō (東条亀次郎), who had made cameras for Asanuma, from 1890 (also?) worked for Konishi Honten.
The Rokuoh-sha History Website shows this camera as the Special Thin Portable Camera (特別製薄形携帯用暗函) introduced in Meiji 27 (1894). Reading the chronology at the site (with translation via honyaku.yahoo.co.jp), it seems the camera was made artisan subcontractors, most likely by Tōjō Kamejirō (東条亀次郎) for the woodwork and by Takashi Korudairō (黒田宗次郎) for the metal parts.
Further below are two images of the Special Thin Portable Camera linked in from the Rokuoh-sha History Website.
It is at present unclear how long the camera model was in production.
If the lens is the original lens that was bought with the camera, and there is at present no reason to assume that it was not (as the wood of the lensboard seems the same), then we can surmise that the camera was produced between 1908 and 1919. The Wollensak Versar Portrait & View 5 x 7 f6 , an 'Extra Rapid Rectilinear'-type lens, is listed in the Catalogue and Price List of Wollensak Photographic Shutters and Lenses (Wollensak Optical Company, Rochester, N.Y. USA) for 1912-13, p. 10; for 1916-17, p. 12, as well as for 1919, p. 26, but not yet in 1906-07 and no longer in 1922.