My new Mastodon profile picture: @arek (There I reveal the behind-the-scenes of my photographic work).
My wife and I tested our new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (We used the cheapest color film available). 📸
My wife and I tested our new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (We used the cheapest color film available) 📸
My wife and I tested our new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (We used the cheapest color film available) 📸
My wife and I tested our new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (We used the cheapest color film available) 📸
Since I wrote this review, I've shot Kodak Aerocolor IV in a few more cameras and a variety of new light settings. I've also learned more about it. Thus, I thought an update is warranted for the:
I tested my new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (I used the cheapest color film available) 📸
I tested my new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (I used the cheapest color film available) 📸
I tested my new old camera from 1954 that produces square images on a 35 mm film, so on a roll of 36 you can squeeze in over 50 images! (I used the cheapest color film available) 📸
I just made a YouTube video on how 35mm film works using Jello and Speinkles (well, black and white anyway). Took a few months, enjoy: https://youtu.be/oK7M_jh4clA
Remember seeing a few Kodak Picture Maker kiosks at Target (and maybe other stores) and the thing that caught my eye was that they used a Sun Ultra 5 pizza box workstation to handle everything.
I would guess that they ran a custom version of Solaris, but I would be surprised of they loaded a customized BSD or Linux operating system on them. I've run into a dead-end in trying to research that information.
That said, I don't plan on acquiring either one on eBay just to find out 😅
Today is the 78th anniversary of the first detonation of a nuclear weapon on Earth, the Trinity Test in New Mexico in 1945, three weeks before the nuclear attacks on Japan.
There will be many images posted of the mushroom cloud today, but here is what mattered more, the fallout cloud. Dozens of homes and communities were blanketed with fallout, which which also contaminated fields as far away as Illinois and Indiana.
The fallout from the Trinity Test that landed in Indiana led to the contamination of strawboard boxes, some of which were used by the Kodak Company to ship film. The radiation from the fallout fogged the film, making it unusable. The story made newspapers after the news of the nuclear attacks on #Hiroshima & #Nagasaki.
When nuclear testing started at the Nevada Test Site in 1951, Kodak was given top secret information about the scheduling of tests so that they could protect their products.
The people who lived downwind from the Nevada nuclear tests were not given the same consideration as the products of the Kodak Company.
When I saw laundry hang drying in San Francisco it warmed my heart. I feel like all of america just being all in on clothes dryers is a mistake that has caused so much unnecessary environmental damage. #StreetPhotography#FilmPhotography#Kodak#TMax100#analog#photography
OC Workmen removing a roll of cable from a truck