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I was browsing through Flickr looking at photos developed in Emofin, and recalled that I had some 665 sitting in the basement, so thought to see what others had done with it. I came across an interesting photo of a dirigible over the Platte River in the U.S., allegedly taken with a pinhole camera using 665 P/N film: https://www.flickr.com/photos/michael-pastur/274722148/
My first impression what that it couldn't be (from a photographic point of view -- didn't look right, out of proportion, etc.), and the discussion on the main page and on the page where the photographer demonstrates how he did it (https://www.flickr.com/photos/michael-pastur/4467100167/in/photostream/ ) strikes me as an interesting display of the differing views of what constitutes photography -- so many people bought into it, and then continued to defend the misrepresentation of the image because they liked how it looked, honesty be damned. Yes, it's a pinhole photo, yes, it's 665 film, but no, it's not a real zeppelin hovering over the heartland; it's a manipulated image that was passed off as straight, there's the rub.
My first impression what that it couldn't be (from a photographic point of view -- didn't look right, out of proportion, etc.), and the discussion on the main page and on the page where the photographer demonstrates how he did it (https://www.flickr.com/photos/michael-pastur/4467100167/in/photostream/ ) strikes me as an interesting display of the differing views of what constitutes photography -- so many people bought into it, and then continued to defend the misrepresentation of the image because they liked how it looked, honesty be damned. Yes, it's a pinhole photo, yes, it's 665 film, but no, it's not a real zeppelin hovering over the heartland; it's a manipulated image that was passed off as straight, there's the rub.