Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Show us your photography

Bushman

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,138
Location
Joliet
Great shots ! It is that time of year. We have a Cardinal nest close by but haven’t been able to get any pics.
Nice! This mother robin decided to make her nest in the crook between by gutter spout and the brick of my house, so the babies are a little out of reach, but not completely so that I can't sneak a quick shot inside the nest once in a while. Thankfully, she didn't build her nest in the bushes next to my front door, as a robin had one year. They eventually abandoned the nest because, well, it's a front door and it's high traffic. She's a good momma, though, and I see her constantly going back and forth from my front yard to her nest, depositing breakfast, lunch, and dinner to her babies.
 
Messages
12,972
Location
Germany
The hat-gang, in 1953/54 at Stalinstadt/Fürstenberg (Oder), later Eisenhüttenstadt. Constructing the "Eisenhüttenkombinat Ost".

My grandpa 2nd from left.
The four identical hats were probably a fun move.
 

Attachments

  • Image0003b.JPG
    Image0003b.JPG
    195 KB · Views: 206

Hagwood

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,017
Location
Fort Worth, TX
Nice! This mother robin decided to make her nest in the crook between by gutter spout and the brick of my house, so the babies are a little out of reach, but not completely so that I can't sneak a quick shot inside the nest once in a while. Thankfully, she didn't build her nest in the bushes next to my front door, as a robin had one year. They eventually abandoned the nest because, well, it's a front door and it's high traffic. She's a good momma, though, and I see her constantly going back and forth from my front yard to her nest, depositing breakfast, lunch, and dinner to her babies.

Very cool. That’s always fun to watch, especially if you can catch them fledging.
 
Messages
12,972
Location
Germany
Lilac & Co.! :)
 

Attachments

  • IMGP6546.JPG
    IMGP6546.JPG
    592.1 KB · Views: 163
  • IMGP6548.JPG
    IMGP6548.JPG
    299.1 KB · Views: 169
  • IMGP6549.JPG
    IMGP6549.JPG
    569 KB · Views: 163
  • IMGP6551.JPG
    IMGP6551.JPG
    376 KB · Views: 160
  • IMGP6553.JPG
    IMGP6553.JPG
    566 KB · Views: 175
  • IMGP6556.JPG
    IMGP6556.JPG
    534.8 KB · Views: 192
  • IMGP6559.JPG
    IMGP6559.JPG
    489.8 KB · Views: 212
  • IMGP6574.JPG
    IMGP6574.JPG
    594.8 KB · Views: 242
  • IMGP6582.JPG
    IMGP6582.JPG
    375.6 KB · Views: 255
  • IMGP6543.JPG
    IMGP6543.JPG
    478.7 KB · Views: 269

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,252
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
And now for something completely different...

Some recent shots from around Beacon, NY... made with a circa-1963 Olympus Pen F half-frame 35mm FILM camera. I've had this camera in the collection for years, but it had overexposure problems (the auto-diaphragm was slow to close), and I only just got it repaired. Good old Tri-X developed in D-76, then scanned the negs at 2400 dpi and did minor cropping and tweaking:

BeaconFlowers.jpg BeaconTulips.jpg EastMainStreet.jpg PowerLines.jpg Retail.jpg BrownieOnCouch2.jpg

The camera itself is a masterpiece of midcentury design, a tiny SLR that takes interchangeable lenses (these were shot with the 38mm normal lens, equivalent to a 55mm on a standard 35mm camera). It gets two vertical 18x24mm negatives in place of each standard horizontal 35mm neg, so I got 53 shots on a 24-exposure roll... and with today's films, there's plenty of resolution and detail in the smaller negatives. It's a shame that half-frame 35mm is a barely recalled format nowadays, I love this little manual camera!

OlympusPenF-1.jpg
 
Messages
11,714
And now for something completely different...

Some recent shots from around Beacon, NY... made with a circa-1963 Olympus Pen F half-frame 35mm FILM camera. I've had this camera in the collection for years, but it had overexposure problems (the auto-diaphragm was slow to close), and I only just got it repaired. Good old Tri-X developed in D-76, then scanned the negs at 2400 dpi and did minor cropping and tweaking:

View attachment 242982 View attachment 242984 View attachment 242985 View attachment 242986 View attachment 242988 View attachment 242990

The camera itself is a masterpiece of midcentury design, a tiny SLR that takes interchangeable lenses (these were shot with the 38mm normal lens, equivalent to a 55mm on a standard 35mm camera). It gets two vertical 18x24mm negatives in place of each standard horizontal 35mm neg, so I got 53 shots on a 24-exposure roll... and with today's films, there's plenty of resolution and detail in the smaller negatives. It's a shame that half-frame 35mm is a barely recalled format nowadays, I love this little manual camera!

View attachment 242995
Olympus Pen was a very cool little camera. You are making me want to break out some of my old film cameras for fun.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,270
Messages
3,077,669
Members
54,221
Latest member
magyara
Top