Cambo SC 9x12
Rolleicord
Meopta Opemus II enlarger
Leitz Prado 500 high-output projector
Photo shooting gallery
"10.32" crime movie , The Netherlands , 1966 , A movie where photo stuff plays an important role.
Cambo used by police for scene-of-crime photography
see how the flash is just put on the bellows for indirect lighting
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Great way to get into contact with a photographer: tripping over the leg of his tripod w. Rolleicord...
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How not to use the lens shade:
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photo shooting gallery (above target seems to be a Cambo 20 instant camera, however in the movie they have it about negative film)
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What is worse is when you see the camera you say to yourself "I need to get me one of those."You know you've got too many cameras when you watch movies or tv, and say 'got that camera' when they appear on the screen..
You know you've got too many cameras when you watch movies or tv, and say 'got that camera' when they appear on the screen..
And what is even worse, is when you say to yourself: "I think I still have one of those cameras, don't I?"What is worse is when you see the camera you say to yourself "I need to get me one of those."
Also Lomo and Wild.In this thread I repeatedly hinted at photomicroscopes.
Both Leitz and Zeiss made photomicroscopes accepting sheet film.
In the Mystery Woman series (Hallmark Movies and Mysteries channel), Kellie Martin at times uses a Leica screw mount and a Rolleiflex. Amazingly, she uses them in her fairly dimly lit bookstore without flash or supplemental light for the most part. She has her own darkroom for processing.
Photo magic, as is shown in The Artful Detective when Murdock can shoot indoors without flash or flash powder in Canada in the very early 20th century. Requires willing suspension of disbelief.
Thats Funny......Just watched One Night in Miami on Amazon. Fictional story about Malcom X, Muhammed Ali, Jim Brown and Sam Cook.
A Rolleiflex 3.5 and Nikon F featured prominently in it.
You know you've got too many cameras when you watch movies or tv, and say 'got that camera' when they appear on the screen..
Not only that, but they changed Perry Mason from being a lawyer, to being a detective.This is still done; the new (last year) Perry Mason series had Perry, at one point, shooting hand held at night (and not right under a streetlight, either) with a Nagel Vollenda (127 half frame folder) -- can't have been any faster than f/3.5, and the setting is the 1930s, so fastest film in 127 rolls was probably (old) ASA 200 (and a 3x4 cm frame would get grainy pretty quick if you tried to make prints big enough to see). Heck, he'd have needed a flashlight just to see the numbers to advance the film!
Not only that, but they changed Perry Mason from being a lawyer, to being a detective.
Not that the original Perry Mason did much lawyering!
Photo magic, as is shown in The Artful Detective when Murdock can shoot indoors without flash or flash powder in Canada in the very early 20th century. Requires willing suspension of disbelief.
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