I’m gaining on the backlog of unedited photos. As one of three faithful readers of my blog, you’ll remember my last post in which I confessed my lack of discipline and my commitment to shooting no more photos until I had waded through the seemingly insurmountable number of images I had yet to process. Well
This certainly isn’t the first post of its type, but I figure the more we remind ourselves of this the more it might sink in and the more we’ll make some art. Three weeks ago I had planned to get out and shoot on a Sunday. I didn’t have any major plans and I used
As if the home office wasn’t full enough of cameras and camera gear already, I saw something on eBay I’d never seen before, and the mental gears started turning. I like to get up close with my subjects sometimes and I love shooting at or near macro. You can get close with a Polaroid SX-70:
(Edited to add… The following is simply an opinion piece on my own part and behalf. I am not, nor have I ever been affiliated in any way with The Impossible Project, or with Polaroid in any of its forms or incarnations. I am a consumer of both company’s products, but that is the extent
Someone I know just bought a vintage Yashica TLR and was met with the realization that we’ve become all too accustomed to our cameras all having built-in light meters these days. So what do you need to know when it’s time to consider a light meter? A side note: You’ll find people ’round the web
Stop me if you’ve heard this one… Guy goes for a hike. Guy finds a shiny thing at the bottom of a river. He pulls it out to find he’s got a totally trashed Sony digicam. Being a geek-type, he removes the memory stick and figures out it safely maintained 244 photos and 25 movie