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The B&O Heights Subdivision was a 12 mile line that broke from the main at Blue Island, IL and ran south to Chicago Heights, IL. This line would make a good model railroad with it's many industries, including National Railway Equipment, Wyman-Gordon Co., Allis-Chalmers, Material Service stone quarry, and not to mention run through trains from the Milwaukee Road's Southeastern Line! By the time of this shot in 1992, the Milwaukee was gone, and so was all the customers south of the quarry, but due to the lack of a run around track, trains still traveled all the way to the Heights to run around their train. That's what you see here, cars from factories in South Holland are making a tour down the line, past a certain Glenwood Police officer who was always on the look out for these runs! The cut through the Valparaiso Moraine is clearly evident in this photo. The line is now a popular walking trail.
Glenwood, IL
Photo by John Eagan
You're waiting for a train. A train that will take you far away. You know where you hope the train will take you, but you can't be sure. But it doesn't matter because we'll be together.
你等著一輛火車,一班把你帶向遠方的火車,你知道那火車會帶你去想去的地方,但你無法確定,然而那無關緊要,因為我們會相守在一起。 - inception
kendi yansımasından korkan,
kalbini yoklamasını bilmeyen,
gözünün önünden geçip giden silüetler
yok olan hisler,yeşeren düşünceler,
kambur olup debelenirken geceye selam etmek..🌙
7011 Likes on Instagram
121 Comments on Instagram:
soniap9: Changes is a great title!
mandygram: Reminds me of the little prince :)
hamad10001: And i should beleive u took this :s
mattwills17: Amazing!
catheriiine_l: Excellent photo!
mirajanaye: @hamad10001 rude
mirajanaye: She did
hamad10001: Oh ok
Contax RX / Carl Zeiss Planar T*1.4/85
fujipro400H
只今、6×6の写真展参加してます
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6636チームNADARメンバー36人が中判フィルムで撮影した6×6フォーマットの写真を展示します。
「6月6日は6×6の日」を合言葉に、6×6フォーマットの真四角写真にこだわったグループ展です。
2012/05/29(火)-2012/06/10(日)
open 12:00-close 19:00 *月曜休廊 *最終日は16:00まで
NADAR/TOKYO
東京都港区南青山3-8-5 M385 Bldg #12
個人の出展者情報:コチラ
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Action shot of two male Grey Kingbird (#297) battling it out in the air.
Temporary Original Image available for better viewing.
(The power of the lightweight Canon 400mm5.6 lens. Sorry Nikon shooters, Nikon does not have the equivalent lens.)
Scanned from the negative. Stand processed in Rodinal, 1:100.
Olympus OM-4T
Zuiko 50mm f.1.4
Rollei Retro 400S
Sinar P / Industar 51 / Agfa MCP paper negative
Ah! Another strange beast. Not because its rarity; in fact, it's quite common, but take a look at it. How on earth did them people at Olympus manage to put a reflex camera into this tiny compact body. Well I guess that the vertical half-frame (18x24mm) helped, but still...
It is the porroprism arrangement of mirrors that made it possible: two small prisms, one in front of the other, instead of one single, bigger pentaprism. It has its drawbacks, too, as the image in the rangefinder is somewhat dim, but hey, I've seen SRLs worse than that.
One curious thing about this camera is that I've heard that long since now, in the era of the all-analog film making the Olympus PEN FT was highly coveted by photography pros in the movie sets, as it offered the chance to shoot stills with frame ratio similar to that of cinema cameras.