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Camera: Canon EOS Elan II E

Lens: Helios 44Đś-6 58 mm f/2 MC

Film: Ilford PAN 100

Scanning Film: Canon Canoscan 9000f Mark II

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Drawing and photo: by me

Made for "Happy Bokeh Wednesday 24": www.flickr.com/groups/italiangirlsphotographers/discuss/7...

 

Ispired on my "new" old analogic camera "Canon A-1"

Disegno ispirato alla mia "nuova" vecchia fotocamera analogica "Canon A-1"

 

This is the only shot in my flickr page that I did't take myself. Thanks to my friend Mauriziopani for taking this great shot!

Box-type camera , made in USA 1957-1960 ; for roll film size 620 . Similar performance compared with the first model , only cosmetic differences .

Happy Pay Day!

 

Decided I deserved a treat, so went out today and got a nice shiny new camera, a Canon 760D.

 

(in my defense, this wasn't an impulse buy, the camera was initially released back in September last year, and I have gazed longingly at it ever since :-P )

shoebox converted to a camera obscura

Bought for a ridiculous price on eBay.

Probably underrated.

 

"The F-301 was identical to the Nikon F-501 (sold in North America as the N2020) in almost every way, except it lacked autofocus.

 

The Nikon F-301 is notable for being the first Nikon SLR sold that lacked a film advance lever. As a result the selector knob, also used to lock the shutter button, has a continuous option in addition to the single shot. It was also the first Nikon SLR to feature DX film decoding.

 

A standard hotshoe flash mount sits above the viewfinder, with which a flash may be attached to the camera. The Nikon F-301 does not feature a built-in pop-up flash (the F-401 was the first Nikon SLR to have this feature).

 

It was also the first Nikon to use polycarbonates in the building of the camera, and was considered by many people as the dawn of a new era for Nikon.

 

This camera is powered by four AAA batteries, loaded from below, necessitating removal of the baseplate. A MB-3 battery pack could be used instead of the standard MB-4 enabling AA batteries to be used instead of AAA. The placement of the batteries meant that the tripod bush on the baseplate was extremely offset from the centre of the camera. The AH-3 tripod adapter could be used to rectify this though it added extra bulk to the camera.

 

The F-301 can be manually preset for film speeds from ISO 12 to ISO 3200, or this can be left to the camera through the DX feature."

 

(Source: Wikipedia)

Graflex Graphic View II, Schneider-Kreuznach Symmar-S 180mm f5.6 at f22, Lomograflok back with Instax wide, expired April 2016.

I like this combination. Easy to carry in my bag everyday.

Occasionally we photographers take an opportunity to capture one another. My friend Fred and I shared that experience.

 

Fred was an amazing friend. He had the knack of making everyone he knew feel special. He was a wonderful person, devoted husband and father, most excellent dance partner, respected gentleman, and all around good 'ol guy. Fred passed away yesterday. My heart is saddened. He will be dearly missed.

Canon lens FD 50mm f1.8 / Kodak Super GOLD 400

Strobist info:

 

SB-900 aimmed at the background, 1/32th power with an orange gel.

SB-700 on a magic arm with a Fstopper flash disc, camera left at 1/64th power.

camera : canon AE1

i drew my camera on my leg today, go me

Praktica with "automatic" ISCO Westanar.

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[ The Best Camera: iPhone Photos ]

 

** Check out our new South East Queensland Meetup group here **

 

About

 

Choose your tree ;) ......

 

Camp Crystal Lake...

 

This image is probably my personal favorite, I love winter, and its returning to Australia soon. The fog will be forming and photographers will be out in force... including me.

 

Landscape photography is all about trying to be in the right place, at the right time. Seconds before this shot was taken the fog covered the lake like a thick blanket. It felt spooky, the fog felt alive and I think we woke it up, because before we knew it, it was all around us, it had lifted from the lake and rushed us.

 

Enjoy.

 

- Canon 50D.

- ISO 100, f9, 2.5 seconds, 70mm.

- Canon 24-70 f/2.8 L lens.

- Tripod.

 

Processing

 

- 100% as the camera saw it. (WB is off, but hey, I like this temp.)

- Border in Photoshop 6.0. (yeah yeah, old school)

 

About Camp Crystal Lake

 

Camp Crystal Lake, the setting for many films in the Friday the 13th (franchise) series.

 

About Lake Moogerah

 

Lake Moogerah, formed by Moogerah Dam, is a water supply and irrigation dam on Reynolds Creek, a tributary of the Bremer River in Southeast Queensland's Fassifern Valley. The lake is used for recreation, fishing and camping.

 

The lake is located around 60 km southwest of Ipswich, and about 90 minutes drive from Brisbane. Boonah is the nearest town, about 15 km from the lake.

 

Construction on the dam began in 1959, although land for the project was resumed as early as 1916. Moogerah Dam was completed in 1961 as the central catchment of the Warrill Valley Water Supply Scheme. The dam wall at Lake Moogerah allows access to Mount Edwards in Moogerah Peaks National Park.

 

The dam supplies drinking water to the towns of Boonah and Ipswich, although the main user is the Swanbank Power Station. It also supplies irrigation water to small crop farms in the Fassifern Valley.

 

There is a popular caravan park at Moogerah Dam. Higher Ground Australia operate Camp Moogerah at the lake for church youth groups. On the western shore are Camp Mallon and Camp Laurence which offer group accommodation camps with educational and adventure activities for school students, family and church groups. On the southern shore is the Brisbane Grammar School Pepperina Hill Campsite, which is primarily used for grade 8-10 camps.

 

During the 1995 drought dam levels declined to a low of 1% total capacity

 

'Moogerah' comes from the aboriginal word Moojirah meaning home of the thunderstorm.

OK so the camera name is covered with black tape and its fitted with a "grey" Canon lens, but I am sure this is a Nikon D700.

 

What do you think ?

 

Now covering the identification marks on a camera used to be a good Idea if you didn't want to be a target for thieves. However nowadays the expensive "professional" cameras are so big they stand out anyway.

 

This guy looks like his day was going badly.

fuji X20

cameraland hawaii

Vancouver

BC, CANADA

 

A shot from a photowalk with my friend Eric.

Testing cameras and new film in Romania.

 

I was out shooting with 120 Lomo 800 film to see what it could do. It was almost dark and raining here but the photo looks a lot brighter - focus was on the path maybe 1.5m away

 

Full film review to follow.

 

04.03.20 - Latest video - youtu.be/WMCDSj-tr2g + blog review mrleica.com/barnack-leica-comparison/

 

Fujica GS645 @f3.5 + 120 Lomography 800 film 1/30

 

C41 lab developed, Epson v800 scan

 

(I will show the camera on a video I shot in Romania)

 

Instagram - www.instagram.com/mrleicacom/

 

mrleica.com/fuji-gs645/

  

Analog camera Kiev 80 with 90mm f/2.8 lens

03 - Apr - 2012:

 

I was taking some record shots of my latest batch of newly-acquired vintage cameras and decided on this one.

 

It's a Fujica AX-3 SLR film camera which arrived this week. I'm looking to make a collection of Fujicas and this is my 6th Fujica SLR

 

Taken on the Canon 5D MkII with 2 remote speedlites in a light tent.

Rolleiflex is the name of a long-running and diverse line of high-end cameras originally made by the German company Franke & Heidecke, and later Rollei-Werk. The "Rolleiflex" name is most commonly used to refer to Rollei's premier line of medium format twin lens reflex (TLR) cameras. (A companion line intended for amateur photographers, Rolleicord, existed for several decades.) However, a variety of TLRs and SLRs in medium format, and zone focus, and SLR 35 mm, as well as digital formats have also been produced under the Rolleiflex label. The 120 roll film Rolleiflex series is marketed primarily to professional photographers. Rolleiflex cameras have used film formats 117 (Original Rolleiflex), 120 (Standard, Automat, Letter Models, Rollei-Majic, and T model), and 127 (Baby Rolleiflex).

 

The Rolleiflex TLR film cameras were notable for their exceptional build quality, compact size, modest weight, superior optics, durable, simple, reliable mechanics and bright viewfinders. They were popular and widely imitated. The high-quality 7.5cm focal length lenses, manufactured by Zeiss and Schneider, allowed for a smaller, lighter, more compact camera than their imitators[citation needed], further differentiating the Rolleiflex TLR from many of its competitors, who were forced by inferior optics to use 8.0cm or 8.5cm focal length lenses. Unique to the Rolleiflex Automat and letter model cameras, the mechanical wind mechanism was robust and clever, making film loading semi-automatic and quick. This mechanism started the exposure counter automatically, auto-spaced the 12 or 24 exposures, and tensioned the shutter; all with less than one full turn of the film advance crank. This makes the Rolleiflex Automat/Letter model cameras very sought-after for shooting fast paced action, such as street photography[citation needed]. A wide range of accessories made this camera a system: panorama head, sun shade, parallax-corrected close-ups lenses, color correction, contrast enhancing, and special effect filters, all mounted with a quick release bayonet, as well as a quick-change tripod attachment. Some amateur and fine-art photographers still shoot Rolleiflex TLR film cameras with color transparency, color negative, or black-and-white film. The later f2.8 and f3.5 letter models (Planar or Xenotar lens) are highly sought after in the used market, and command the greatest price. Rolleiflex TLRs are no longer manufactured. Historically there were five focal length cameras available include 5.5cm Rollei-Wide, 6.0cm Baby Rollei, 7.5cm (f:3.5), 8.0cm (f2.8), and 13.5cm (f:4 Zeiss Sonnar) Tele-Rolleiflex. Although all Rolleflex cameras can be fine user cameras, there is also, an active market for many Rolleiflex models as collectables, and this adds (greatly in some models) to the end price paid, particularly in Japan[citation needed].

 

courtesy: wikipedia

A simple camera for the 126 cartridge , with a single shutter speed , and the choice of 2 apertures . Made in early 1970s? This model without flash contacts .Country of origin not mentioned , but his companion 'Clik-o mat' was made in Hong Kong .

Taken By: Me

Edited By: Me

 

QTRZ . d e l i r i u m © All rights reserved

  

This is the first camera I ever used. George Cross was my Grand Father, who died in the early 50's. I would have used this camera in the mid 60's.

A photo within the main hall of the museum, taken with an OM20 film camera.

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