View allAll Photos Tagged camera+,
This is my Mamiya 35 mm camera which I purchased brand new in 1984 and have been using it ever since.
I believe that this is the last 35mm model camera that Mamiya made. Is this correct and why did they get out of the 35 mm format?
This small, 1.5" Diecut Chromolithograph Sticker would have graced a Victorian era scrapbook. It shows a studio set with a view camera on a tripod, a plate holder, and head rest. I bought it with five others that show 19th century technology. Two of them show telephones, two show carbon arc lighting, and one is of a telegraph apparatus. I will add scans of all of them but do not have a set that would be appropriate. Maybe I should add a diecut group.
A poppy-field, a man, a camera... discovered some pink poppies amongst the red.
Same poppy-field, a woman and a camera... the result...
Have a wonderful day, filled with love and beauty, M, (*_*)
Please do not COPY or use any of my images on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Why not view the set as a slide-show?
Also I often upload more than one image at the same time, I see a tendency to only view the last uploaded...
This is the actual camera that Sir Edmund Hillary used at the summit of Mt Everest on 29 May 1953, the first camera ever to take a photo from the top of the world. Fancy using a Kodak for such an occassion, what was he thinking?! No wonder Tenzing refused to take Hillary's photo...
Manufactured for a giveaway in 1930 by Eastman Kodak Co. This camera was a special edition of the No. 2 Hawk-Eye camera Model C, issued to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Eastman Kodak Co. Approximately 550,000 were given away to children 12 years old in 1930. It is covered with a tan-colored reptile-grained paper covering with a gold-colored foil seal on the upper rear corner of the right side.
See the ad announcing the camera give away here.
See also: www.boxcameras.com/annivkodak.html
Diving as a camera operator at NASA's Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory. Summer of 2003. This particular photo was taken during a safety drill, where we simulated an emergency leak in the asttronaut's suit. In such a situation, the camera diver's job is to keep the camera focused on the astronaut's face so that the topside operators can tell how the astronaut is feeling and if he/she is experiencing any discomfort. Can be kinda tough when the safety divers are rushing the astronaut to the surface.
Trail camera image captured this image of a nice buck in my back yard. I only hunt these with my trail camera now days. I just wish they would stop eating my strawberries!
Week 32
Introducing my F100, 35mm film camera! Picked it up second hand with a vertical grip. I'm slowly adjusting to film and the "pro" layout. Also trying to get use to not instantly seeing the results. Looking forward to my journey with film!
First seen in the picture in the comments!
Strobist info:
SB-700 camera right,bounced off ceiling
SB-900 camera left,bounced off ceiling
Triggered with cybersyncs
Clockwise:
Taron Marquis
Taronar 1.8/45
CDS light meter
Taron VL
Selenium light meter
Taron VR
Taron PR
Common features:
Taronar 2.8/45
Citizen shutter 1-1/500 and B
self timer
Rangefinder
This cameras were made in Japan, in the late 50's, by Nippon Kōsokki that become Taron .
Some new American made Jabo marbles testing out the capabilities of my new Kodak Z990 camera. I have noticed that the color balance on this one leans a hair to red, as opposed to the Z981 that tends to lean towards yellow.
A great addition to my collection! It is as new and fully functional! This model is the last 35mm film camera in production when digital pretty much took over.
The Nikon F75 (sold in the United States as the N75 and Japan as the U2) was the last consumer-level autofocus 35mm SLR camera sold by the Nikon Corporation beginning in February 2003.[1] The camera replaced the similarly consumer-targeted Nikon F65.
The Nikon F75 is still sold cheaply on the used market, and is valued because it can drive Nikon's newest lens designs, including those with AF-S and VR.
There was a version, dubbed the F75D (N75D) that featured a date-recording back.
I never took a picture of this one like I did my other cameras. I got this for Christmas from my boyfriend. Now I want a Chaika 2! I like that this one has a meter but it doesn't have a B setting. It is still very cute and since it's small I like to take it to the store and bug my boyfriend by taking pictures of him. I enjoy buying wrapping paper and I found this paper underneath my bed the other day so I decided I would use it for pictures. I used my strobe and umbrella with this. I can't wait to get another one!
Strobist: Two speedlites on lightstands, one in her face (no gel), one from behind where the pink spot is (pink gel). I cloned-out that lightstand. No light modifiers.
We did this fashion shooting with a compact camera (Canon G10), not just for the fun of it (although it was fun!), but also because of the faster shutter. I tried the cam up to 1/3200 via cable some months ago - worked fine. This time we used RF transmitters and I used a shutter speed of 1/500 s. Also fine. => Perfect ambient under-exposure for a really dramatic sky :-).
Nicer viewing:
www.model-kartei.de/bilder/xxl.php?picid=9802760.
This is how it works in detail:
Leica's flagship in 1938, the IIIa with collapsible 50/2.0 Summar lens. Now I can take photos just like Henri Cartier-Bresson!
Ever wonder how these things work? rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-90.html
Or how to spot a counterfeit? rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-213.html
Or how to take one apart? rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-155.html
The Fotochrome camera is one of the most unusual cameras in my collection. It was made by Petri in the 1960's - I don't think these ever took off.
This one is in NEW condition.
Sharing high honors among American 35mm cameras with the Argus C44, the Kodak Signet 80 is the last 35mm camera to be made in the USA with interchangeable lenses. The body of the camera is made of Bakelite plastic (like many earlier Kodak and Argus models), but workmanship and finish are first rate. Shutter speeds run from 1/4 to 1/250, the view/rangefinder is exceptionally good, it features rapid spool-less loading and a two-stroke rapid wind, plus a built in uncoupled EV system light meter. Lenses available were a 35mm wide, 50/2.8 triplet normal, and 90mm telephoto in a slick bayonet mount reminiscent of some Bell & Howell movie cameras.
Pretty Ballerina Dancer Landscape Nature Photography! Beautiful Model Fine Art Ballet Dancer Dancing Ballet Portraiture Leotard! Nikon 810 & Sigma 50mm f/1.4 DG HSM ART Lens for Nikon DSLR Cameras Portrait Photography
Epic Fine Art Photography Prints & Luxury Wall Art:
Support epic, stoic fine art: Hero's Odyssey Gear!
All my photography celebrates the physics of light! The McGucken Principle of the fourth expanding dimension: The fourth dimension is expanding at the rate of c relative to the three spatial dimensions: dx4/dt=ic .
Lao Tzu--The Tao: Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished.
Light Time Dimension Theory: The Foundational Physics Unifying Einstein's Relativity and Quantum Mechanics: A Simple, Illustrated Introduction to the Unifying Physical Reality of the Fourth Expanding Dimensionsion dx4/dt=ic !: geni.us/Fa1Q
"Between every two pine trees there is a door leading to a new way of life." --John Muir
Epic Stoicism guides my fine art odyssey and photography: geni.us/epicstoicism
“The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness.” --John Muir
Epic Poetry inspires all my photography: geni.us/9K0Ki Epic Poetry for Epic Landscape Photography: Exalt Fine Art Nature Photography with the Poetic Wisdom of John Muir, Emerson, Thoreau, Homer's Iliad, Milton's Paradise Lost & Dante's Inferno Odyssey
“The mountains are calling and I must go.” --John Muir
Epic Art & 45EPIC Gear exalting golden ratio designs for your Hero's Odyssey:
Support epic fine art! 45surf ! Bitcoin: 1FMBZJeeHVMu35uegrYUfEkHfPj5pe9WNz
Exalt the goddess archetype in the fine art of photography! My Epic Book: Photographing Women Models!
Portrait, Swimsuit, Lingerie, Boudoir, Fine Art, & Fashion Photography Exalting the Venus Goddess Archetype: How to Shoot Epic ... Epic! Beautiful Surf Fine Art Portrait Swimsuit Bikini Models!
Some of my epic books, prints, & more!
Exalt your photography with Golden Ratio Compositions!
Golden Ratio Compositions & Secret Sacred Geometry for Photography, Fine Art, & Landscape Photographers: How to Exalt Art with Leonardo da Vinci's, Michelangelo's!
Epic Landscape Photography:
A Simple Guide to the Principles of Fine Art Nature Photography: Master Composition, Lenses, Camera Settings, Aperture, ISO, ... Hero's Odyssey Mythology Photography)
All art is but imitation of nature.-- Seneca (Letters from a Stoic - Letter LXV: On the First Cause)
The universe itself is God and the universal outpouring of its soul. --Chrysippus (Quoted by Cicero in De Natura Deorum)
Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness
Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun
Conspiring with him how to load and bless
With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eves run;
To bend with apples the moss'd cottage-trees,
And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core;
To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shells
With a sweet kernel; to set budding more,
And still more, later flowers for the bees,
Until they think warm days will never cease,
For Summer has o'er-brimm'd their clammy cells. --To Autumn. by John Keats
A few of the Arguses, (Argi?), in my collection. Argus A on the top shelf and others on the next. The cabinet is older than the cameras, with hand formed glass in the doors.
Talk about high resolution, telephoto capabilities! This camera sports a 240" inch (that's 6100 mm!!) focal-length lens; f-8. If this were a digital camera, it would have a resolution of about 3-5 GigaPixels!!!
Thanks to avidday, here is more information: That camera was a prototype, built to go into the bomb bay of the RB-36 and was intended for used for forward looking high altitude reconnaissance missions in the late 1950s. It was a 240" f/8 folded optics design using 18x36" negatives, and was an evolution of the smaller 240" f/11 camera which flown operationally onboard the RB57/Canberra over central Europe in the latter half of the 1950's.
Photo taken at the Air Force Museum, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton Ohio.
Finest American TLR and one of the finest American cameras of any type, the Ansco Automatic Reflex aimed straight at the Rolleiflex market (expecting that the Rollei would not return to the market after the devastation of WWII) and was priced accordingly - In the event, the Rollei Automat returned just as the Ansco was getting started, and by the end of the 1940s, Rollei had won. The Ansco used the same lens and shutter as the much less expensive CiroFlex C and E models, but it was a very effective combination and left the Ansco nothing to apologize for.
This particular camera is the original 1947 model, without flash synch - hence the professionally installed Heiland synchronizer instead of an ASA flash post.
More Ansco Automatic Reflex stuff here: rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-33.html
And an original review of the camera from the February 1948 issue of Minicam Photography:
rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-77.html
And here's the 1949 Wards camera catalog with the Ansco and the Rollei listed side by side:
www.flickr.com/photos/rick_oleson/35602236283/in/album-72...
With the world's last supply of Polaroids in jeopardy. Photographers around the world have turned into brutal savages, dividing into tribes to pillage ebay listings. It is utter madness. In this polaroid wasteland only one man can unite them all. The Roid Warrior; from the land of the Impossible.
Concord, California
Polaroid 600se
Expired 669 Film (Bleached)
I love that you can see our pink flamingos in this shot. Cooper took this with his collar camera.
Cooper's official blog: www.PhotographerCat.com | Cooper on Facebook
Buy Cooper's photo book, framed photos and more at Cooper's gallery store.