Thunderer
Member-
Posts
81 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
I had the same problem at work but in strangely I found large groups are easier than small groups to give a talk to. With large groups I didn't bother about individual responses but with small groups I could follow the reactions of individuals which could be unsettling. Other than that Ihave no explanation but it was true. Also given that you know the subject inside out you will be able to deal with any questions. I would say go ahead and do it. At the least it wouldbe a change from all those travelogue/holiday snap talks I get to see! Jeff
-
Serious question. Can someone point me in the direction of one of these aggressive forums please? I am interested to see if the problem is hostility, point scoring, oneupmanship etc rather than blunt but honest critiques. I have been on forums where every image was "awesome" which was not true or useful. I would have no problem with robust exchanges of view as long as there was no agenda behind comments. I am reluctant to offer critiques in case I upset people although critical comments ( on other forums ) about my work are usually ok and helpful. Jeff
-
Blimey. You have been stalking me! I had a Lubitel. Lens was mostly good but had a soft area. The camera disintegrated on me. After the Mamiya I got a Bronica 645 format SLR with three prime lenses. An excellent camera. Then I was persuaded, with a bit of financial help, to sell my Bronica and darkroom stuff and get an Alpha 100 to use with my Minolta lenses. With 20/20 hindsight I should have stayed with film and got a digi bridge camera for convenience and holiday snaps. Ah well upwards and onwards with technology?? Jeff
-
Yes. a TLR. A very strong but light simple construction with fixed lens. I don't remember there were zoom lenses in those days but the first zoom lens seemed to sacrifice everything for convenience. Photographers pretty well accepted fixed lenses and worked around the limitations and with the benefits. The daft thing Idid was sell it. It would have been a good investment. I returned many years later to a Mamiya TLR. A much heavier machine but it had interchangeable lenses. But also a good tool. I had necessarily to work slowly so my photos were much more considered. Jeff
-
My mother got a 1b after I got the 1a. The great advances were indeed the built in meter with match needle exposure settings plus expanding shutter speeds to 1/15 and 1/500 and an f2.8 lens. Agfa slide film ..... Hmm. Lurid greens and fading within a couple of years. Strange how the German cameras were regarded as superior eg Retinettes to Leicas but colour films were very inferior. Kodak K10 and 25 were superb and indeed my interest in photography was attending in about 1958 a slide show of an RAF Himalayan mountain expedition taken on Kodachrome. I moved on to medium format by saving my wages from working in a market garden ( my back still aches with the thoughts of picking French beans all morning ) for 12.5 pence per hour and buying a Rolleiflex Auto for not much money and selling it on because it didn't have flash synchro. What an idiot I was ( still am ) Jeff
-
You talk about K25. Us old folk remember when K25 replaced K10 and being a bit surprised that saturation seemed to have been toned down. The assumption was that quality had been sacrificed for speed ! Sad to say my pictures are no better now than when I was in my early teens shooting K10 on my Retinette 1a ( f3.5 50mm fixed lens and shutter speeds 1/30 to 1/250 ) and exposure calculated by reference to month, time of day, quality of light, film speed, direction of light and subject, but now technical quality is better and there are far more shooting options. Tonality and smoothness seem as important as sharpness in assessing technical quality but those are two qualities difficult to assess on most screens. Jeff
-
The laws of physics and optics have not changed. Digital images need sharpening which may well be done by the camera when processing raw files into jogs. If you use raw files then sharpening is a normal processing action by the photographer/printer. Why would it be a question of needing to admit anything? After all techniques were used in film days to enhance apparent sharpness eg dilute ID11 1+3 to enhance acutance rather than use stock or 1+1 For what it is worth my view is that very sharp A3 prints can be routinely made from digital files whereas it was difficult from 35mm and MF film but OK from 4" x 5" negs. But tonality is another matter. Jeff
-
Sorry for late reply. Actually, actually going to meetings does not mean you will not be ignored. I joined one a few months ago and I go most weeks. The most meaningful conversation I have had was about sitting in the wrong ie someone else's, place. Even winning both the print and DPI beginners' monthly comp. has not made me worthy of inclusion. But on reflection they possibly didn't connect my name with anyone they recognise. But I have paid my subs and shall keep on attending. A couple of lectures were OK. The last one was about how to improve your photography to which the answeres are to have a go at PAGB accreditations and use photoshop layers creatively! As an aside I was surprised, when the successful accreditation collections were shown that at least two photos were in all three collections ( I can't say panels of pictures because there was no theme or thread running through them but rather collections of unconnected images.) Jeff
-
IPad lightning to HDMI connector
Thunderer replied to Thunderer's topic in Equipment and Settings Advice
Sorry folks. Ignore the question. I confused a VGA cable with an HDMI cable ----- dohhhh Jeff -
A long shot question. I have a 3 metre HDMI cable to connect my non Internet PC to my TV. Today I bought an Apple lightning to HDMI connector to connect my IPad to TVS BUT the HDMI connector on the lightning connector is much smaller than my cable HDMI. Question is what connector do I now have to buy to connect them? I presume some sort of mini HDMI male to big size female HDMI connector. Any advice gratefully received on how to spend yet more money! Jeff
-
Statins for high cholesterol. No side effects.
-
I don't think that has been mentioned because it was not part of the question which was entirely about technical matters. The point you make seems entirely correct but is for a different thread. Jeff
-
FZ28 I think. One really good aspect was the available full manual control in RAW. The lens had a remarkable range. I got it secondhand with known provenance after I got fed up changing DSLR lenses as I climbed a hill on Eigg on a windy day and kept getting left behind and worrying about dirt on the sensor. It was good for on screen pictures but prints bigger than 8" x 10" were somewhat lacking. I subsequently got a second DSLR body and was able to readily change between bodies with different lenses but witha weight penalty. Jeff
-
I had a Panasonic FZ with an enormous range lens. Within it's limitations it was good but that tiny sensor's 10mp produced noticeably poorer prints than Sony a100 10mp. But on a laptop screen for which 10mp seems overkill there seemed little difference. Jeff
-
Thanks for your real life observations. It is print quality that matters to me so your info. is relevant to my question. And I rarely do action shots and usually shoot at ISO 100 - although if low light capture was very good I would probably use higher ISOs more often. Jeff