I often wear a panama hat while out photographing.
I'd expect the paper bag to be a bigger problem.
I often wear a panama hat while out photographing.
Meaning the last one in that series? Looks like it. The cap has aged as well as Rodchenko.Was this a self-portrait?
https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auc...ander-rodchenko-museum-series-portfolios-no-2
You could store a lot of 35mm rolls under a cap like that.
How does it work with wide-brim hats when one holds a camera like an SLR in portrait orientation? It doesn't hit the brim?
With any hat, you should use a rangefinder camera. The viewfinder can always be at the top because it's in the corner.How does it work with wide-brim hats when one holds a camera like an SLR in portrait orientation? It doesn't hit the brim?
But anyway, Rodchenko did a lot of diagonal stuff.
Meaning the last one in that series? Looks like it. The cap has aged as well as Rodchenko.
BTW, I disagree that a wide-brim hat would be better for a photographer. You could store a lot of 35mm rolls under a cap like that.
Brett Weston managed to operate a pipe, but his uniform seemed to be sunglasses and a leather jacket.
You're quite right. A longer length is needed for self-defense.I fail to see the practicality of photographing while carrying 12" or 30 cm of copper tubing, steel pipe or PCV pipe.
I meant the one with the wide-brim hat. We don't know, though, if he wore that while shooting.
Julian vs Gregorian calendar?
Was this a self-portrait?
https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auc...ander-rodchenko-museum-series-portfolios-no-2
Canadian Tuxedo, and Saskatchewan Roughriders' cap.
Yes, everyone born in Russia before 1918 had two birthdays, but times were hard in the early phase of the Soviet era and they could no longer afford the luxury of two birthdays, so the calendar was reformed to give everyone only one birthday.
No, that photo with the brimmed hat and intense (doomed) gaze is certainly a portrait of the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky, made by Rodchenko. See:
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/229011/vladimir-mayakovsky
Yes, everyone born in Russia before 1918 had two birthdays, but times were hard in the early phase of the Soviet era and they could no longer afford the luxury of two birthdays, so the calendar was reformed to give everyone only one birthday.
No, that photo with the brimmed hat and intense (doomed) gaze is certainly a portrait of the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky, made by Rodchenko. See:
https://www.artic.edu/artworks/229011/vladimir-mayakovsky
I must be doing something wrong: my birthdays are always dirt cheap.Yes, everyone born in Russia before 1918 had two birthdays, but times were hard in the early phase of the Soviet era and they could no longer afford the luxury of two birthdays, so the calendar was reformed to give everyone only one birthday.
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