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This is what is produced by a rolling shutter, 1/9 second total exposure time, 2500 RPM.
See this image for what would be expected with an open shutter.
See this image for a similar simulation with a smaller sensor.
Taken in Ciutadella, Menorca, this unoccupied loft was home only to pigeons and a family of Barn Owls.
© Kevin Pazmino 2012
All Rights Reserved
This was a test shot that I fell in love with. To me it said something that I was expecting to see until I got back the positive. Her name is Abby and she is texting to someone as if they were right in her hands. To me it said something about our time in which, we are constantly moving so fast, "communicating", and somewhere else in the palm of your hand.
Canon EOS 1VHS
Canon 28-80 f2.8-4 L USM
FUJI Slide Film 100 ISO Expired
Scanned on Epson V700
Downtown Los Angeles
Please do not download, copy, edit, reproduce or publish any of my images. They are my own intellectual property and are not for use without my express written permission
Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta 531
Formato: 120mm 4.5 x 6 cm
Lente: Zeiss Tessar f3.5 75mm com obturador SYNCRO-COMPUR Nr 1255504
Velocidades: B até 1/500
Fabricada entre1937 até 1956
Playing with my shutter speed at home together with a nice flash light.. Able to produce a nice wave of light in the air :) (or was i just running at lightning speed? Up to you to decide :P)
These long-legged flies are very sensitive, most of the time, they fly away while I press the shutter as if they are alerted by the shutter clicks.
Zorki (Russian: Зоркий, meaning sharp-sighted) is the name of a series of 35mm rangefinder cameras manufactured in the Soviet Union between 1948 and 1978. The Zorki was a product of the Krasnogorsk Mechanical Factory (KMZ), which also produced the Zenit single lens reflex camera (SLR). The first Zorki cameras were inexpensive Leica II copies just like the FED, but later models were considerably different from the Leica.
The Zorki 4, 1956, was a Zorki 3S with self timer added. With over 2 million units produced, the Zorki 4 was the most successful Zorki and has a reputation as one of the best Russian cameras, although the self-timer and slow shutter speeds were unreliable. When using most Zorki cameras, the shutter speed should only be set after the shutter has been cocked. Setting the shutter speed before the shutter is cocked can permanently damage the camera. This especially affects all Zorki cameras with slow shutter speeds under 1/30 of a second, in particular the Zorki-3 and Zorki-4.
Controlling your shutter speed will let you choose between freezing motion or capturing motion blur. Our complete guide to camera settings in Issue 31 tells you everything you need to know about shutter speed, aperture, ISO and more. It's available in print: ow.ly/qyixX and digitally: ow.ly/qyiDX
Heres the results screen after tripping the shutter 8 times. The waveform is updated each time the shutter is tripped. The last test waveform is left on the screen.
You can see that this box camera is pretty consistent with it's shutter timing. The long rise time is typical of these rotary shutters.
A complete test took about a minute.
The finished result is my restored highlight along the edge of a vital crack in my wood area. This trick can be used in many of your watercolours, and as long as you don't overdo it, it can be quite effective.
Photography as a hobby has been part of my family since before the First World War when my grand-parents dabbled with photography. My father and mother did a lot of photography in their younger days. Just after the Second World War my father bought a Voigtlander Avus plate camera second hand. He used this both for photography and later as an enlarger.
I have converted all the pictures to sepia monochrome as that felt in keeping with the pictures of the period. There are three serial numbers on the camera, one on the lens, one on the shutter and one on the body. The lens serial number suggests that the camera possibly dates from about 1929 to 1930. This picture shows a close up view of the lens and shutter mounted on a rack rising front.
Voigtländer Avus is a series of folding plate cameras, manufactured by Voigtländer & Sohn AG, Braunschweig, in Germany from 1913 to 1935. These medium-to-upper-quality cameras were made in various formats. They had double-extension bellows, were equipped with Ibsor or Compur shutters (either the older dial-set or the newer rim-set versions), and high-quality Tessar-type lenses, such as Voigtländer's own Skopar design, or with a Voigtar lens. The front lens standard allowed a small amount of both rise/fall and lateral shift. Other than that, they were typical of the other folding plate cameras of the day, with big folding sports finder and additional brilliant viewfinder. The name Avus was taken from a popular car race circuit in Berlin, the first speedway of Germany. There is another explanation in the literature: the name A.V.U.S. is abbreviation of the company name: Aktiengesellschaft Voigtländer Und Sohn, (Voigtländer & Son, Limited Company).