now that is very nice
skip
At 07:16 AM 7/13/01 -0400, you wrote:
A scene from Columbus, Georgia, from the
spring of this year:
(my apologies if your email chops this url)
http://hiddenworld.net/pinhole/?cmd=maxstart=pic=clouds-over-columbus.jpg
___
Leezy,
you can get good ones at Educational Innovations
www.teachersource.com
good prices, too
Jim
Orange red GLOW STICKS,
What are these?
Where do you purchase them?
leezy
They have also been used by scuba divers going night-diving, but
are now out of favor because the chemicals in them are so nasty
that you really don't want them in your landfills.
At 3:06 PM -0700 7/13/01, John Yeo wrote:
Plastic tubes filled with some kind of chemical. There is a smaller
Plastic tubes filled with some kind of chemical. There is a smaller glass
tube inside the plastic tube filled with another chemical. When you flex
the plastic tube, and break the glass one, the two chemicals react and put
out light. You can get them in various colors, red, orange, green, blue
In a message dated 7/13/01 9:02:41 AM, zin...@telenet.net writes:
Orange red GLOW STICKS,
What are these?
Where do you purchase them?
leezy
Jeff,
What the URL to your site? Thanks.
Kate
http://www.pinholeday.org/exhibition/index.php?formName=EXHIBITf_action=req
uestf_rec=55f_fieldName=date_addedf_fieldData=2001-04-30+16%3A58%3A29f_n
ewrec=55goprev.x=10goprev.y=7
I think it might be #54. I picked 55 out of that ugly URL above and it
wasn't right. I left-arrowed down one and #53
Thanks for the comments on the picture. This was taken on the
Chattahoochie river right before a huge storm. The water, below the dam,
in the picture was teaming with huge alligator gar fish, which made the
scene even more surreal in person. These huge, seemingly armor plated,
fish would swim
Hi:
Yes paper is pretty forgiving. Its not nearly as sensetive to light as
film. I rate paper at 6 ASA when I use it in a camera. My darkroom has a
couple of small light leaks around the door. I haven't bothered fixing
these yet. I will when I start processing real film. The CGP orhto film
Jeff,
Amazing photograph. It has a great sence of movement and pull towards the
buildings in the center. And the clouds filling up the sky intensify that.
Most of the other images on your sight are a lot more still, with out the
dramatic lines shooting in towards the middle.
Another one on
Safelight tests for the following worked out well for RC papers:
1. Red Christmas light bulb in a night light fixture
(see www.paintcancamera.com)
2. Orange Christmas light bulb in a night light fixture
3. Orange red GLOW STICKS, if you have no electricity!
This is really fun and is
I've been using a red party bulb from the grocery store for about
10 years. You have to check around the base to make sure the red
coloring covers completely. I covered the gaps with opaque tape.
I've also used orange christmas tree lights. I haven't tried leaving
a piece of paper out for
Sometimes and sometimes.
If it is bright out and your eyepiece covers your eye, you can make out some
detail...enough to aim with.
If the mirror is properly sealed you aren't using internal metering, you
shouldn't need to caver it
at least on Canon 630's
andy schmitt
-Original
In a message dated 7/13/01 4:18:16 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
dilc...@hiddenworld.net writes:
A scene from Columbus, Georgia, from the
spring of this year:
(my apologies if your email chops this url)
http://hiddenworld.net/pinhole/?cmd=maxstart=pic=clouds-over-columbus.jpg
Wow...those
A scene from Columbus, Georgia, from the
spring of this year:
(my apologies if your email chops this url)
http://hiddenworld.net/pinhole/?cmd=maxstart=pic=clouds-over-columbus.jpg
Can one see thru the prism/viewfinder on an SLR with a pinhole drilled
body cap?
principally: yes. but you need a considerable amount of light.
Does one need to cover the eyepiece on an SLR conversion to prevent
stray light entering thru the eyepiece?
Depends on the quality of the camera
At 12:24 AM 7/13/01 -0500, you wrote:
That's photo number 54, in case anyone is having
trouble pasting the url back into one piece after it
was mangled by the e-mail system.
Mike Vande Bunt
You can also refer to images in the pinhole day exhibit this way:
That's photo number 54, in case anyone is having
trouble pasting the url back into one piece after it
was mangled by the e-mail system.
Mike Vande Bunt
skip crawford wrote:
look at
http://www.pinholeday.org/exhibition/index.php?formName=EXHIBITf_action=req
look at
http://www.pinholeday.org/exhibition/index.php?formName=EXHIBITf_action=req
uestf_rec=55f_fieldName=date_addedf_fieldData=2001-04-30+16%3A58%3A29f_n
ewrec=55goprev.x=7goprev.y=8
i know its long bu thats tha address
wide angle 35 mm film pinhole image by one of my students with camera she
Can one see thru the prism/viewfinder on an SLR with a pinhole drilled
body cap?
Does one need to cover the eyepiece on an SLR conversion to prevent
stray light entering thru the eyepiece?
Thanks
Murray
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