James Markus wrote:
This is Oscar, a feral born in my back yard. He moved inside a few years ago, and has a cat's dream life by "the big scream TV" - a slider with bird feeders attached. Shooting a black cat against a bright background isn't fun, and now that I have a TLR he is scared of the camera. Whereas he use to pose for the camera. I think he thinks the lenses are eyes?
When the branches are bare at the end of autumn, I feel the itch to start using my pinhole camera again. Ondu 6x6 pinhole camera with red filter, Fomapan 400. Developed in Black, White, and Green at 1:100 for an hour, semi-stand as an experiment. It worked.
This is Larry, my sons family cat. When Larry heard the camera click he jumped straight up approximately 4 feet, and ran out of the room. The rug he is standing on looked like it had been twisted into a rose shape. Within a couple minutes he came back as I finished straightening the rug - rubbed my face, and acted like he meant to do that.
San Jose Earthquakes vs. D.C. United. 20' Christian Espinoza scores on a penalty kick. The ball is past the outstretched keeper, but hasn't hit the twine yet.
Nikon FM2n, AI Nikkor 50mm f/1.8S, Kentmere Pan 400, developed in LegacyPro L110 at 1:31 for 5.5 minutes.
Desmolicious wrote:
He’s just telling you need to get a Rolleiflex.
Nah, I made my choice for Mamiya. The Ikoflex, Yashicaflex, Waltzflex, and literally all the other TLR's are copies or variants of the exact same design.Mamiya's have unique featurers like interchangeable lenses, interchangeable viewfinders (the 3.5X-6X chimney is amazing), sheet film backs, addon light meters, extra close focusing via long extending bellows - a simple mechanical parallax correction. Yeah, they are extremely well built or rugged even clunky, but they grow on you like a barnacle attaches to a ship hull.