#POlaroid 100 land camera
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#Marin Sakata#阪田マ���ン#昭和#カメラ#ポラロイ��#ポラロイドカメラ#Polaroid#Polaroid Land Camera#Supercolor 100#Style#Fashion#Photography#2023#Red
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Astratto su telo by Michele Nicoletti Via Flickr: Foto eseguita con Polaroid Land Camera 330 modificata per scattare in pellicola 120, in formato 6x9.
#Polaroid Land Camera 330#hacked Polaroid#Fomapan 100#rodinal 1+25#self developing#home developing#film#film photography#film is not dead#I belive in film#i shot film#black & white#bianco e nero#Medium Format#Medio Formato#6x9#scan from negative film#Epson V600 scan#flickr
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202206 36 von Marian Rainer-Harbach Über Flickr: Camera: Polaroid Automatic 100 Film: Polaroid ID-UV (2009-02), backwards peeled
#analog#automatic 100#backwards peeled#expired#film#id-uv#id-uv 2009-02#instant film#land camera#marian rainer-harbach#model 100#pack film#polaroid#type 100#flickr
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Look at the case and camera, like new! Polaroid Colorpack II Land Camera. Do you love cameras Tumblr? ❤️
Tumblr LOVES cameras. The Kodak Colorpack II.
#vintage#camera#vintage camera#polaroid#land camera#polaroid colorpack II#instant camera#vintage photography#type 100 film#1960's#1970's
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Furfur has two photos because he has two cameras
The madness continues I guess? This is Fufur's camera(S) from the x-ray content on Amazon prime. They said it actually worked on the day, which is a little crazy for a few reasons... most notable of which, is that this is not one camera. It's two cameras.
The bottom one is a heavily modified 70's sx-70, probably with a front that has been covered in black pebble grain leather to hide the viewfinder and logos in the front. It's also upside-down, so that the polaroid comes out the top of the camera. I've drawn the shape hidden inside the steampunk accessories
That photo that comes out during this shot is from the sx-70 with the Mirage 28mm macro lens attached to it (lol wtf. That is extremely funny if you know anything about photography). The second camera is an original 1948 95 model land camera in black. These were originally portait or vertical, aned flipped out with a stand as the cover. Here they've added a barrel lens and taken the front cover stand off.
They've also combined the viewfinders to be up top beside the flash. These older models didn't have an automatic film ejection. You had to rip the film out of the back after opening it. The film was also slightly different sizes than the polaroid you've probably seen before. See below.
The one is Furfur's camera ejection is wider than the smaller, more close up shot in Crowley's hand later in the dressing room. Because the images tracked on to the film in the theatre were 100% done in post (no polaroid film develops that fast), it could just be a small inconsistency. It would make sense. But why go through all the trouble to build a double polaroid camera for Furfur to use? And if there are two polaroids, where's the other one? And why does Furfur not seem to have it?.
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Thanks to @kimberleyjean @thebluestgreen and @embracing-the-ineffable as always.
#good omens meta#good omens 2#art director talks good omens#go season 2#good omens season two#go meta#good omens season 2#furfur#good omens#good omens analysis
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Could we get lucy x introverted reader? Maybe she’s really anxious and only the boys (mostly lucy) can get her out of her shell and that’s how they get together . I just feel like she’s so down to earth and loving she’d be so helpful in getting reader out of her shell and doing things she may not be able to do by herself!
i love this omg! of course!
‼️RPF‼️
HC - Lucy x introverted reader
- being friends with the boys has its ups and downs. most if not all were pretty extraverted and outgoing whilst you preferred to be in the shadows and more calmer as an introvert
- you preferred to watch rather than do. watch the boys jam out to a song on the karaoke machine. as much as you wanted to join in deep down, your head convinced you to not. not wanting to be judged by the eyes all around you.
- you loved to go out with each of the boys however. but lucy was one of the boys who understood you the most
- while going out with phoebe means going from one place to another quite quickly , lucy likes to take things slow.
- a perfect day out would consist of book shopping popping into your favourite bookstore and stocking up on books to read over the next few months.
- quiet conversation between the two of you as you giggle to each other, showing off the books you find on the shelf
- lucy and you going to a cafe for lunch. a small quiet cafe that has not a lot of people in there is just perfect
- you get quite anxious sitting in cafes. growing anxious and nervous when all the eyes land on you walking in the door. you always end up getting the coffee to go instead of sitting down and enjoying the scenery
- it definitely had a vibe to it. lucy’s hand intertwined with yours as she smiled down at you reassuringly. both of you can sit and relax down here for a bit.
- in the line waiting to be served, lucy asks you what do you want? you order an iced coffee with a slice of cake.
- lucy orders both orders and leads you to sit in a corner table away from everyone
- lucy taking out her bag full of books and hands some over to you to look at
- both of you would do this once a week. if not get books then to just simply enjoy the sunny day at the shop. it became a regular for the both of you
- lucy asked if you’d like to go an art museum with her one day as a date perhaps - you say yes
- lucy is kinda shocked how you said yes, didn’t think you would. you didn’t think she would ever ask you out either
- museum dates, art museum dates, bookshop dates
- your favourite was visiting a cafe that was also also a bookshop and a flower shop. as cliche as it sounded it was beautiful. lucy buying a bouquet of flowers for your house
- lucy big spoon you little spoon 100%
- laying in bed, head on her arm as she plays with your hair with one hand and reads out loud to you in the other.
- falls asleep in her arms not even 10 minutes later
- you feel a bit more confident when out with lucy. enough to order both of your foods and drinks in the coffee shops
- you love to sit across from each other, lucy in her own little world reading where she left off. you love to doodle in your notebook, often doodling images of lucy
- you’re always shy when you give them to her. she’s always so happy, either framing it or putting it on her desk
- youre a polaroid type of person. you love to take polaroids
- lucy has a polaroid of you and her together in her wallet
- your camera role is filled with photos of you and her together. you’re the type of person who wants to capture the moments
- you always take candid photos of lucy. you’d rather be the one to capture the photos than be in them. you like keeping the memories close
#pom writes#lucy dacus one shot#lucy dacus au#lucy dacus fanfic#lucy dacus x reader#lucy dacus x introvert reader#lucy dacus fluff#boygenius au#boygenius fanfic#boygenius one shot#boygenius x reader
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(synthpop anon) to be more specific i'm looking for more stuff in the vein of depeche mode, new order, pet shop boys, soft cell, etc. the type i can best describe as "fun music with jaded lyrics". speaking of yaz(oo) i already really like upstairs at eric's!
hmmm. I worry that I might not have the best recs for you then because I'm one of those people who doesn't pay THAT much attention to lyrics... it took me a full decade to realize that tryouts for the human race is a song about sperm. sung from the perspective of a sperm lol. I just hear a moroder synth line and black out
so forgive me if any of these are (1) songs/bands you already know or (2) don't quite fit the ticket, but let me try to suggest some stuff based on vibes...
sparks, actually. I still haven't listened to most of their 80s discography (one of these days...) but I adore no 1 in heaven, which is 100% synthpop, and kimono my house, which isn't. but those boys are insane lyricists so if you like fun music about crazy shit you're in the right place.
if you already like yaz (I specifically said yazoo in my last response in case you hadn't heard of em, since when you google "yaz" the first thing that comes up is the birth control pill... but as a yank I admittedly never call them yazoo lol) then you know that vince clarke is a fucking legend. and as one half of erasure I think some of erasure's lesser-known hits fit the bill. love to hate you, who needs love like that, oh l'amour...
bronski beat for more gay synthpop. oh shit marc almond is here?
I only know a handful of devo songs, so if you want better recs you'd need to ask my dad lol, but i like love without anger and freedom of choice
XTC!!!
prefab sprout has some bangers across the board but the king of rock and roll is a song about a washed-up music star with thomas dolby in the production seat. so pretty much exactly what you're looking for.
tears for fears? broken, change, mothers talk... plus the US mix of mothers talk that I mostly don't like but I adore the intro (it's not that you're not goooood enough... it's just that we can make you bet-taaah...)
OMD is good. check out dazzle ships
midge-ure era ultravox is maybe too on the nose. literally dancing with tears in my eyes, lol. plus reap the wild wind, the thin wall, and of course vienna
not necessarily jaded lyrics but aztec camera is really moody and good. I love high land, hard rain (and this extended version of walk out to winter...)
jaded but not synthpop: the english beat. seriously, hear me out
it's less synthpop-y than some of this other stuff, but these gary numan solo albums are my fave: dance and I, assassin
if you don't already like japan you gotta go listen to gentlemen take polaroids front to back. then try titles by mick karn
some random one-offs: happy hour; promises, promises; the politics of dancing
and then, of course, the all time legend
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From FB group - The Goodwill Bins
It’s definitely secondhand if someone regifts it to you, right?
At a former job, one of the salesmen got this teapot as a holiday gift from an overseas vendor. He stuck it in a closet in his office where it sat on a shelf for years.
He decided to clean out said closet one day and knew I was into pottery (art degree, loved my two pottery classes). So he gave it to me.
I get it home and notice that it has a certificate of authenticity. Turns out the artist, Heinrich Wang, is quite famous for making “impossible” porcelain works. The shapes are so un-porcelain that only about 30% of pieces actually work out and they can take over two years to complete.
This one is part of the Lighter Than White collection. It’s called Circles of Fulfillment.
Last I checked, his store was turned into a museum. I feel pretty lucky to own a piece even if no one here has heard of him!!!
He also gave me a mint condition Polaroid Land Camera 100!
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Henry Dreyfuss: Groundbreaking UI Designer Part Two
This is the second in a two-part series on designer Henry Dreyfuss. Read part one.
World War II and a Move to California
Henry Dreyfuss, Raymond Loewy, and Walter Dorwin Teague designed a series of strategy rooms for the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff at the beginning of World War II. Dreyfuss’s contribution was “four 13-foot rotating globes, one each for Roosevelt, Stalin, Churchill, and the Joint Chiefs” (1).
In February 1944, when The Society of Industrial Designers (SID) was founded Walter Dorwin Teague was its first president, and Dreyfuss served as the organization’s first vice-president. After the War, Dreyfuss moved his family to Pasadena, California, and “opened a second office near his home” (2). In 1946, William F. H. Purcell and Robert Hose became partners in the firm. (1)
Henry Dreyfuss, SS Constitution for American Export Lines (1950). Image source.
In the early 1950s, Dreyfuss designed two steamships, SS Independence and SS Constitution for American Export Lines. (3) For these ships, he developed aluminum deck chairs to replace the heavier wooden deck chairs. (5) Although his firm had done consulting work for Honeywell since the late 1930s, it wasn’t until 1953, Dreyfuss designed the most important product for that firm, the round Honeywell thermostat, “which allowed it to fit cleanly on a wall whether it was askew or not, unlike rectangular ones which frequently appeared crooked”(4).
Henry Dreyfuss, Thermostat for Honeywell (1953). Image source.
During this time Dreyfuss continued working with Bell Laboratories. “In 1949 Dreyfuss updated Bell’s Model 300 telephone with the model 500, which would become the first phone to be offered in a color other than black beginning in 1954. It would ultimately go on to be the most popular phone ever made”(4). An updated version of the wall telephone and the Princess phone were introduced during this decade.
Henry Dreyfuss, Bell Laboratories Model 500 telephone (1949). Image source.
The 1950s also saw Dreyfuss publish his seminal design book, Designing for People. “The book illustrated his ethical and aesthetic principles, [and] included design case studies, many anecdotes” (5), along with anthropometric charts. A second book dealing with ergonomics, The Measure of Man, was published in 1960. (1)
Dreyfuss’s Late Career
During the 1960s Henry Dreyfuss Associates clients included American Safety Razor Company and Polaroid Land Company, which introduced his design for the model 100 camera in 1963. Also during this time, his firm was responsible for the rebranding of American Airlines and continued to collaborate with its long-time client Deere & Company designing four new tractor models during the decade. (3)
Image source.
In 1965 several professional design organizations, including The Society of Industrial Designers, merged to form the Industrial Designers Society of America (IDSA). Dreyfuss was its first president. (7)
Henry Dreyfuss retired from the design firm that bore his name in 1969, but remained working “with top management of several clients to analyze and improve their contact with customers”(3). In 1972 Dreyfuss, along with his wife Doris, worked on Symbol Sourcebook: An Authoritative Guide to International Graphic Symbols, a reference guide “of over 20,000 symbols [that] continues to provide a standard for industrial designers around the world”(4).
Henry Dreyfuss, Cover pages for Symbol Sourcebook: An Authoritative Guide to International Graphic Symbols, McGraw Hil Publishers (1972). Image source.
The Tragic Deaths of Henry and Doris Dreyfuss
In 1972 Henry and Doris Dreyfuss had been happily married for 42 years, but Doris was suffering from terminal cancer. At one point the pain became too much for Doris to bear. On October 5 of that year, the Dreyfusses went into the garage of their home at “500 Columbia Street in South Pasadena, California”(3), got into their car, and turned on the engine. “Within a few minutes they both died. They had lived their life together and ended it together”(7). “Authorities reported the cause of death as carbon monoxide poisoning”(3). The couple was survived by their son and two daughters.
Henry Dreyfuss Associates
The firm that Henry Dreyfuss founded in 1929, continued as Henry Dreyfuss Associates for over four decades after his death”(4). “After Dreyfuss’s retirement, Donald M. Genaro served as president of the company until 1994. In the 1970s, Henry Dreyfuss Associates was responsible for designing the “interiors of nuclear-powered Trident missile submarines”(3). In the next decade, the company “added a major new client in Falcon Jet Company”(3), and was averaging about 50 new products a year. (2)
When Genaro stepped down as president in 1994, a team of several partners took control of the firm. During the 1990s a new utility vehicle was designed for long-time client John Deere, and the company designed the interiors of a line of business jets for the Astra Jet company. Projects for AT&T in 1992 included a notebook computer and a smartphone “which featured an onscreen keyboard”(2).
Henry Dreyfuss Associates relocated to Ann Arbor, Michigan in 2004. (3)
The Legacy of Henry Dreyfuss
In 1963, “Henry Dreyfuss became a trustee of Caltech,… though he had been a faculty member of the engineering division for many years, and had annually lectured on industrial design to students in Business Economics”(5).
In 1996 a major retrospective of the work of Henry Dreyfuss appeared at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York, the same year a book on his work was published. The Industrial Designers Society of America posthumously awarded Dreyfuss the Individual Achievement Award in 2004. (2) The Henry Dreyfuss Archives are located in the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum.
A second retrospective of Dreyfuss’s work was held in 2020 at the Figge Art Museum in Davenport, Iowa. Currently the Cooper-Hewitt celebrates the 50th anniversary of Symbol Sourcebook: An Authoritative Guide to International Graphic Symbols with a special exhibition that runs through Spring 2024.
Henry Dreyfuss’s genius spans product design, graphic design, user interface design, as well as business and marketing. His greatest contribution to design is emphasizing the importance of the utility and usability of a product as well as its style.
References
Industrial Designers Society of America, (2023). Henry Dreyfuss, FIDSA. https://www.idsa.org/profile/henry-dreyfuss/
Uhle, F. (n.d.). Henry Dreyfuss Associates, LLC. https://www.encyclopedia.com/books/politics-and-business-magazines/henry-dreyfuss-associates-llc
Wikipedia, (24 February, 2023). Henry Dreyfuss. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Dreyfuss
Futurama, of the city of, designed by Norman Bel Geddes for the General Motors Exhibit at the New York World's Fair in 1939. New York, 1939. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/2012645722/.
Dreyfuss, J. (22 October, 1972). Henry and Doris Dreyfuss. https://calteches.library.caltech.edu/2944/1/dreyfuss.pdf
Industrial Designers Society of America, (2023). Our Story. https://www.idsa.org/about-idsa/our-story/
Jones, R. A., (7 May, 1997). Our Dreyfuss Affair. La Times Website. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-05-07-me-56286-story.html
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National Camera Day
Dust off an old digital camera, buy a disposable camera, or just fire up your smartphone and snap some pictures of your day to keep those memories forever.
The origin of National Camera Day is unknown, but it is used as a reminder for us to remember the existence of the camera and its many benefits. After all, how many other mediums can capture people and places so beautifully? How many other mediums can evoke smiles of memories past, or reminders of events that have shaped our lives?
The camera, in all of its many forms, is to be celebrated. This humble device has become a major part of our lives, and so, on National Camera Day, snap some photos during your lunch hour, on your commute to work, or whenever a moment of inspiration strikes.
Of course, the way you take pictures probably won’t be the way that people did it before the advent of digital photography and smart devices. Readers of a younger generation will be reaching for their smartphones to take photos of the world around them. And even if you are somebody who was well-versed in the wonderful world of 35mm film and zoom lenses, you might still find yourself reaching for your mobile device instead of that vintage camera from yesteryear.
Still, no matter what type of device you use to take photos, do something this National Camera Day. We all need to express ourselves creatively, so let your juices flow when you’re out and about or pottering around in your home, and take some magical pics.
History of Cameras and Photography
Cameras and photography have developed substantially over the years, from its early roots with the French inventor Joseph Niépce right up to modern day digital photography.
Joseph Niépce was a French inventor and is most noted as one of the inventors of photography and as a pioneer in the field. He developed the heliograph; a technique used to produce the world’s first known photograph in 1825, the view from the window at Le Gras the families estate.
In 1839, Louis Jacques Daguerre took the first fixed image that didn’t fade. He is recognized for his invention of the daguerreotype process of photography. He became known as one of the fathers of photography. His method required 30 minutes of exposure. He named the process – the Daguerreotype. Tintypes were developed in 1856 by Hamilton Smith and decades later, George Eastman invented flexible and unbreakable film that could be rolled. This was the birth of the first Kodak that was offered for sale in 1888.
In 1925 the Leica I went on sale, and its immediate popularity spawned a number of competitors. Kodak was one such competitor, and they released the Retina I in 1934. Though 35 mm cameras were still out of reach for most people things would soon change with the introduction of the inexpensive Argus A in 1936. The Japanese camera industry began with the birth of Canon in 1936 with its 35 mm rangefinder. Japanese cameras would soon become incredibly popular in the West after the Korean War as veterans and soldiers stationed in Japan brought them back to the United States.
While conventional cameras were becoming more refined and sophisticated, an entirely new type of camera appeared on the market in 1948. While TSLR and SLR were still the rage this new camera would change the way people would capture memories. This was the Polaroid, the world’s first instant-picture camera where no film development was needed. Known as a Land Camera after its inventor, Edwin Land, this camera was able to produce finished positive prints from the exposed negatives in under a minute. This new camera took the market by storm as people no longer had to sit still for long periods of time in order for their photographer to snap a picture.
The first digital camera that was commercially sold was in December of 1989 in Japan, the DS-X by Fuji. In 1991, Kodak brought to market the Kodak DCS-100, the beginning of a long line of professional Kodak DCS SLR cameras that were based in part on film bodies. It used a 1.3 megapixel sensor and was priced at $13,000.
The first commercially available digital camera, in the United States, was the 1990 the Dycam Model 1. It was originally a commercial failure because it was black and white, low in resolution, and cost nearly $1,000 but this changed and soon became loved by photographers.
With the standardisation of JPEG and MPEG in 1988, image and video files could be compressed for storage onto a SD or CF card. With the introduction of the Nikon D1 in 1999 at 2.47 megapixels, this was the first digital SLR that was entirely by a major manufacturer. The D1 cost just under $6,000 and was inexpensive for professional photographers and high-end consumers. This camera also used Nikon F-mount lenses, which meant photographers could utilise many of the lenses they already owned.
By 2010, nearly all mobile phones featured built-in camera with a resolution of 1-2 megapixels digital video camera. Many cameras also featured built-in GPS.
How To celebrate National Camera Day
You don’t need to know the history of the camera to celebrate National Camera Day, but while we have given you a snapshot of the people and events that have paved the way for the cameras we use today, you could make a special effort to learn more, be that at your local library or by looking up facts online.
The most obvious thing to do today is to take some pictures of your own. Use your smartphone if that is your camera of choice, but if you do have access to a digital camera or something that still uses film, brush the dust off it, and take it out for a walk. Who knows what you might see when you’re out and about, be it a comical moment that you can later share with your friends, or a piece of rare beauty that you can capture in a photograph to be looked on forever.
Take photos of your family and friends too, and along with any other pictures you take, share them on social media if they were digitally taken. And why not gift a photo to another? If you have taken something that will have special resonance for another, print it off and put it in a photo frame.
Today could be the day to push yourself out of your comfort zone. So, you might put down your phone and use an actual camera for your photos, and you could take shots of something that you have never attempted before. It could be a sunrise or sunset, birds in flight, or a scenic view at great height, as just a few examples. Just be careful if you attempt that last one!
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#Canyonlands National Park#Mesa Verde National Park#Wilkerson Pass#Utah#Nevada#Colorado#Old Colorado City#Colorado Springs#cityscape#USA#landscape#countryside#Hall Winery#reflection#Louis M. Martini Winery#California#summer 2022#original photography#National Camera Day#29 June#taking photos#NationalCameraDay
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Vintage 1967 Polaroid Land Camera 220 Packfilm Camera.
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Vintage Polaroid Automatic 100 Land Camera Tested ~ Great Condition.
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202207 01 von Marian Rainer-Harbach Über Flickr: Camera: Polaroid Automatic 100 Film: Polaroid ID-UV (2009-02)
#analog#automatic 100#expired#film#id-uv#id-uv 2009-02#instant film#land camera#marian rainer-harbach#model 100#pack film#polaroid#type 100#flickr
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on her birthday, polaroid 250 [polaroid 669], photography by aurélien boyer.
#polaroid#portrait#polaroid 669#669#expired polaroid#expired film#land camera#polaroid 100 land camera#polaroid 250#girl#girlfriend#instant photography#instant camera#instant film#photography#film photography#analog photography#analog#film#filmisnotdead#istillshootfilm#aurélien boyer#aurelien boyer
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Step into the woods by Maija Karisma Via Flickr: Roid week 2017 Day 4 photo 1
#Polaroid#instant#pola#little bit better scan#Polaroid 100 land camera#689#expired film#peel apart#nature#roid week 2017
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POLAROID LAND CAMERA 100 C FUJI FILM
I have recreated the look of Fuji 100 C Film for Lightroom & Photoshop ACR
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