There were a couple of places I think I
recognized, but most of them are just anonymous locations with no context.

I was also hoping to be able to identify places shown and the thought occurred to me that maybe pictures of location signs were deliberately not taken for security reasons.

Plus, he appears to have jumbled the chronology with stateside images mixed into the images from Europe and different locations all mixed together.

The way I understood the video was the rolls were mostly unidentified.

Still they were interesting shots.


Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller

----- Original Message ----- From: "John" <sesso...@earthlink.net> Subject: Re: OT: Artist Develops 31 Rolls of Lost Film Shot by a Soldier inWWII


I never could get the link to work. Finally resorted to searching for
"31 Rolls of Lost Film" which gave me a link to the video at a different
site that had a link to:

http://www.rescuedfilm.com/

It's very interesting, but I wish he'd included captions to indicate
where the photos were taken. There were a couple of places I think I
recognized, but most of them are just anonymous locations with no context.

They "deserve to be seen", but they also deserve to be understood.

Plus, he appears to have jumbled the chronology with stateside images
mixed into the images from Europe and different locations all mixed
together.


On 1/31/2015 10:43 AM, Darren Addy wrote:
Very interesting on multiple levels. Makes me want to get back to
scanning all the old negatives that I bought at the garage sale last
year.

The fact that scanning has the ability to pull more detail out than
all the dodging and burning in the world (or printing on photographic
paper) makes me wonder what could be done with some of the old
masters' reject negatives. I'm sure I'm not the first one that has had
such a thought.

The video itself is also very well done. One could analyze it shot by
shot (with a stopwatch in hand) and get a nice little roadmap for how
to make a video visually interesting.

On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 9:17 PM, Mark C <pdml-m...@charter.net> wrote:
On 1/30/2015 12:17 PM, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:


http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=Iztyk&m=3hPjFrH1DJsqOiF&b=_fSgOVpmgsdAil.NMaXmQA

Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola

Interesting and fabulous images in the finally developed and scanned rolls.
I have to say that me makes the process of developing film sound most
magical when it is really quite mundane. Also surprised that he is not using
stand processing vs conventional development. But again - the outcome is
marvelous.

Mark


--
Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.


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