Sports with a TLR would be a riot: runner takes off to the right, while I, looking into my TLR, pan left to catch him.![]()
That's what makes it fun.
That, and the comments and questions you get about the gear.
Sports with a TLR would be a riot: runner takes off to the right, while I, looking into my TLR, pan left to catch him.![]()
Sports with a TLR would be a riot ...
You should, its fun...
Sports with a TLR would be a riot: runner takes off to the right, while I, looking into my TLR, pan left to catch him.![]()
That's what makes it fun.
That, and the comments and questions you get about the gear.
Photography is an "artistic medium" but film isn't...everybody knows that..
When I was in high school, Rollei TLR's were used for everything, including sports. But I don't personally use em. In my print collection there is an old cyanotype box camera picture of a pair of oxen pulling a log with two chains as a snowplow. I think that's how arcane image stitching will be regarded in a decade or two. Something easier will be developed. But I just hate the more-often-than-not fake look of it. Just buy an 8x10 camera and be done with it in one shutter click; that's what I call progress. Likewise, I was beside a trail with my Sinar Norma atop its tripod a few days ago, and three hikers came by asking to have their picture taken with a cell phone. I couldn't even see the screen due to the glare, and they complained about the same issue. I pointed to the darkcloth hanging over my view camera and asked why they didn't include one of those with the cell phone? Too easy a solution, I guess.
Well, most hikers have at least a baseball cap. But they apparently need one with the same logo as their phone, a cap they paid $250 for as a dedicated accessory, to figure out how to use it. The instructions can be found on page 1075, paragraph 32, small-print footnote 6 of their Smartphone owner's manual. My solution is even easier. Leave the stupid phone home. Why do I want that annoyance when I'm trying to enjoy my outdoor time?
Well, most hikers have at least a baseball cap. But they apparently need one with the same logo as their phone, a cap they paid $250 for as a dedicated accessory, to figure out how to use it. The instructions can be found on page 1075, paragraph 32, small-print footnote 6 of their Smartphone owner's manual. My solution is even easier. Leave the stupid phone home. Why do I want that annoyance when I'm trying to enjoy my outdoor time?
Cell phones don't even work many places I go. I grew up without any phone. The bigger the view camera, the easier it is to carry. I patented a helium filled bellows. That way I don't need airports either. There are things cellphones are good for. If you arrive at a smooth lake and can't find any flat pebbles, cellphones skip across the water nicely.
There's a reason why these things have sports finders though. They do work.
Yes, they call them sports finders because the cameras are bad at sports unless you use them.
Don't get me wrong I like my TLR but if the subject is moving in an unpredictable manner they're a pain unless I use the "sports finder" which is an approximation rather than an ideal view. I had the same problem with a Hasselblad of course, and when I got a mirrored viewfinder that corrected the reversed image it made all the difference.
(snip_
Reminds me of the people in the 60's & 70's who said using micro film in a 35mm camera gave LF quality, and then Tech Pan would make LF obsolete, they were so naive because Tech Pan was also available as LF sheet film
(snip
Ian
Yes, they call them sports finders because the cameras are bad at sports unless you use them.
Don't get me wrong I like my TLR but if the subject is moving in an unpredictable manner they're a pain unless I use the "sports finder" which is an approximation rather than an ideal view. I had the same problem with a Hasselblad of course, and when I got a mirrored viewfinder that corrected the reversed image it made all the difference.
When 'somewhat' occasionally interested with 35mm Tech Pan some years ago and 'investing in a couple of 'bricks of 20' rolls I soon realized that my Pentax 35mm was 'severely lacking' the ability to make use of the 'swings and tilts' that either my 4x5 Linhof or my 'well aged' 8x10 Burke and James 'Woodie' that 'lost its coat' of grey paint .
Seeking for some frozen 'sheet film' in my freezer recently, I came across an unopened brick that had been 'forgotten' over the years... and I don't know what to 'do' with it. Yes... it did provide very fine grain but, I gave up seeking grain-lessness in favour (Canuckian spelling) of better 'control' of the final Large Format image.
Ken
Ken
That the technical shortcomings of UHD streaming are forcing a move up in sensor size to minimise noise/ grain to try and paper over the unpleasant compression artefacts is rather amusing.
Dang -- I was looking for the full-frame copies I have, but shot with a TLR about 50 years ago. Me shooting surrounded by the other team, and another defending the inbound pass.. Very non-PC poster! LOL!
Dang -- just deleted the post...might have been 35mm images. I'll repost them here, but will look for the square prints I have somewhere. (Note the very un-PC poster!)Fun! "Run what you brung" as they used to say.
funny you should mention that... I’d take a minimally compressed 720p stream over a heavily compressed 1080 or even 4K stream any day as it tends to just look better, even though it has less overall spatial resolution.
It tends to get forgotten (partly because film prints got beaten up pretty quickly, or were umpteenth generation) that one of the few cases where most people will see a truly uncompressed moving image (outside of a colour grading suite) is from an optical print struck as directly as possible from a negative - all digital motion picture formats for cinema etc have to compress to one extent or another, otherwise the sheer volume of data would be essentially undistributable.
this is true, however, I’ll still take a lower resolution image that has been compressed less over a higher resolution image that has had the daylights squeezed out of it in a heartbeat. There’s a lot more to image quality than raw resolution. People bag on canon cameras because their out of camera video files are high bitrate and not sharpened in camera, however, in the right hands, those video files often times end up looking a lot better than others in the distributed version of the video. I’d very much rather have a 300Mbps+ unsharpened 1080p picture coming out of my camera than a 120Mbps 4K picture that has a whole pile of in camera sharpening applied so that the cameras contrast AF system can work. That 4K image tends to look very video. Yes, it’s crispy and sharp, but it also doesn’t look as good because it’s way more compressed.
A high bitrate, fat beefy 1080p video with 4:2:2 color and appropriate output sharpening will almost always look better overall than a low bitrate 4K video with 4:2:0 color. People tend to focus way too much on the raw resolution and not so much on the other aspects that have just as big of an I a pact on the final output quality.
I think the quantity and quality of colour matter much more immediately than sharpness/ resolution/ lack of noise or grain. This is an area where digital origination seems to have become obsessed with the wrong aspects of colour reproduction (but that's a whole different story).
What are files? Trying to get out of jail? I thought San Quentin Prison was half an hour south of you. I use files to sharpen garden shears and things like that, never film.
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