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#21 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: FRESNO, CA
Posts: 12,560
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Quote:
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"THE ASSISTANT GURU OF STUFF" |
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#22 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Here I am in front of Todd's Grocery in 1931 selling Grit newspapers
Posts: 2,548
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I like this idea.....if you want to take more authentic photos, find one of these:
http://licm.org.uk/livingImage/1930Room.html you can find them rather cheap, film will be more hard to find and....color film was in wide use during the 30s. Stay with the Kodachrome. The Sepia style, that can be created from Photoshop today from digital photos, were more the old tintype photos taken in the 1800s/very early 1900. The Voigtlander is a good choice to find and the Leica, although late 30s, it will still produce the proper photos for the time period.
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"Bullshit and Brilliance Comes with Age and Experience" "Hey Lady, ya wanna buy a Grit?" "If you don't learn to laugh at trouble, you won't have anything to laugh at when you're old" Will Rogers |
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#23 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Redding Cal
Posts: 1,388
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Film isn't to bad and really isn't as hard to find as you can imagine, its the processing that is expensive. It can be made cheaper by doing your own processing though, which is what I do. Brownie box cameras can still be had cheap also a lot of tlr cameras can be had cheap. If the camera originally took 620 film you can reroll 120 film onto the spools and use them. This is the case for all the Brownies as 620 was a Kodak version of 120. Another option is converting or "hacking" these old cameras to take 35mm which is MUCH cheaper to work with. I have one old Tlr camera that I have converted to 35mm, it takes vertical panoramas now. As far as pics from the 30's not having the sepia tone, some do some don't. I have a series of 7 shots that hang in my hallway that were taken by my grandfather at Oakland Speedway in the 30's sometime and they have the sepia tone to them. Some of the others I have from this era don't. And of course there is always digital conversions. I use a program called Snapseed mostly for this. Don't just use the program to convert it to B&W or sepia, it just looks like a digital B&W then. You need to add a little grain, play with the contrast and focus etc...... Here are some real film shots I've done all 120 through my 6x7 120 medium format camera. Hobo on a bench: ![]() Young lady: ![]() My grandfather and friends in sepia from the 30's:
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Blackwall Panthers Nor Cal chapter Last edited by Tiny; 10-15-2015 at 10:34 AM. |
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#24 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Bozeman, Montana
Posts: 999
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Bob Johnson, thank you so much for posting that photo. I thought that A495 was in the MAFFI museum and now I see that those two thugs have it. Your photo provides me with an idea of who I am going to be dealing with. I appreciate it. ;-)
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#25 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Here I am in front of Todd's Grocery in 1931 selling Grit newspapers
Posts: 2,548
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I've seen Leica's for a couple of $100.00 a few years ago in places that really didn't know their value. Wish I had picked one up. Hindsight is 100% vision improvement over the blindness you once had.
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"Bullshit and Brilliance Comes with Age and Experience" "Hey Lady, ya wanna buy a Grit?" "If you don't learn to laugh at trouble, you won't have anything to laugh at when you're old" Will Rogers |
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#26 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Redding Cal
Posts: 1,388
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Leica for a couple bills. That would have been a deal!! I have a 1936 Ziess Ikon That I use every now and then. I makes some neat images.
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Blackwall Panthers Nor Cal chapter |
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#27 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Western NY
Posts: 36
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We just did the same thing. A vintage steam locomotive was scheduled to be passing thru our area. We grabbed the A and waited for it. My wife just stood across the street with my phone and took this pic. The train was actually doing about 40 mph when it went by.
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