Someone on here once told me that "French film" used to be a term for shooting without film in the camera.....
Someone on here once told me that "French film" used to be a term for shooting without film in the camera.
-NT
Bert, that is our last tool against supremacy from over the ocean.
soup
If you really want to know when and why we lost the 'U' in coulor, (there was a url link here which no longer exists) (from post #9 onward).
"Glop"
...I believe I invented this use of the term back in the early Listserv days of the internet on a carbon printing 'forum".
Wrong. My mother invented the term, coining it for a (delicious) concoction of elbow macaroni, tomato sauce, and hamburger meat passing for Italian fare in our mid 20th Century Midwest bred sensibilities. Looks like you may owe me some royalties.![]()
My parents made some elbow macaroni, ground-meet, & tomato-sauce concoction that we really like. With various other ingredients, it is like an home-made Hamburger Helper. When my brother moved out and later married, he began eating in what he considered a "classy" manner (read, expensive). One day he dropped by as we were sitting down to this unnamed meal.
"Oh, you're having that? I love that crap!"
So now we call it "That Crap."
And when did # become the shortened version of number instead of No. ?
So french film, used contre-jour would make one feel like a diptych.![]()
xactly!A dip what?
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