DSLR Owners Unite! (56k? Are you kidding me?)
i love the little SB400 flash.
i'm running into alot of people that don't know anything about cameras, photography, etc... that are asking me about getting a D60 and the first thing i tell them is forget the D60, it's a waste of extra money from the D40. Your best bet for a first DSLR is the D40 purchased right away with the SB400 flash. perfect starter package. shoot i am VERY reluctant to move up from mine because of how well of results you can achieve with the kit glass and SB400. nice shot of the cons.
i'm running into alot of people that don't know anything about cameras, photography, etc... that are asking me about getting a D60 and the first thing i tell them is forget the D60, it's a waste of extra money from the D40. Your best bet for a first DSLR is the D40 purchased right away with the SB400 flash. perfect starter package. shoot i am VERY reluctant to move up from mine because of how well of results you can achieve with the kit glass and SB400. nice shot of the cons.
Well I finally got around to posting some pics in my Flickr account haha. Been using webshots since I can upload like 4k photos a month haha. I'll just keep my nice shots in Flickr from now on. Let me know what you guys think of these.
Photo subject - My little bro's guitar on his bed




Focus was a bit off on this:


Photo subject - My little bro's guitar on his bed




Focus was a bit off on this:


http://www.independent.co.uk/life-st...d-1418929.html
some news you guys may find interesting.
some news you guys may find interesting.
Smile! Polaroid is saved
A businessman plans to rescue the abandoned format for the sake of art. Emily Dugan reports
Sunday, 18 January 2009
For a generation, the Polaroid camera gave near-instant pleasure to millions of users around the world, chronicling everything from births and weddings to the downright explicit. But when digital photography came along in the 1990s – with instant images and the ability to edit and delete pictures before they see the light of day – Polaroid was doomed, its iconic white-framed snaps apparently defunct.
When Polaroid announced last February that it would stop production of its instant film, it seemed the much-loved camera was gone forever. But within weeks, a group of users had started a global campaign for the format to return. And now, thanks to an unlikely saviour, their pleas have been heard.
If all goes to plan, the Polaroid factory in Enschede, Amsterdam, will soon be making film again thanks to its new owner, an eccentric Austrian artist and businessman named Florian Kaps. Mr Kaps, 39, has dedicated the past five years to instant photography. He set up Polanoid.net, the biggest Polaroid gallery on the web, and the first ever Polaroid-only art gallery in Vienna, called Polanoir.
Now he plans to save the film. "The project is more than a business plan; it's a fight against the idea that everything has to die when it doesn't create turnover," said Mr Kaps.
Dubbed "The Impossible Project", the development of new film for Polaroid cameras launches today. Working with the Manchester-based black and white photography company Ilford, the machinery is in place to produce film of two exposure types, each compatible with both the classic SX-70 cameras popular with artists and the more modern 600 series.
Work has begun on a prototype. By hiring 11 of the original Polaroid team from the factory floor, Mr Kaps aims to mass produce both colour and black and white film under the Impossible label by December, coinciding with the projected date that existing stocks will run out.
A businessman plans to rescue the abandoned format for the sake of art. Emily Dugan reports
Sunday, 18 January 2009
For a generation, the Polaroid camera gave near-instant pleasure to millions of users around the world, chronicling everything from births and weddings to the downright explicit. But when digital photography came along in the 1990s – with instant images and the ability to edit and delete pictures before they see the light of day – Polaroid was doomed, its iconic white-framed snaps apparently defunct.
When Polaroid announced last February that it would stop production of its instant film, it seemed the much-loved camera was gone forever. But within weeks, a group of users had started a global campaign for the format to return. And now, thanks to an unlikely saviour, their pleas have been heard.
If all goes to plan, the Polaroid factory in Enschede, Amsterdam, will soon be making film again thanks to its new owner, an eccentric Austrian artist and businessman named Florian Kaps. Mr Kaps, 39, has dedicated the past five years to instant photography. He set up Polanoid.net, the biggest Polaroid gallery on the web, and the first ever Polaroid-only art gallery in Vienna, called Polanoir.
Now he plans to save the film. "The project is more than a business plan; it's a fight against the idea that everything has to die when it doesn't create turnover," said Mr Kaps.
Dubbed "The Impossible Project", the development of new film for Polaroid cameras launches today. Working with the Manchester-based black and white photography company Ilford, the machinery is in place to produce film of two exposure types, each compatible with both the classic SX-70 cameras popular with artists and the more modern 600 series.
Work has begun on a prototype. By hiring 11 of the original Polaroid team from the factory floor, Mr Kaps aims to mass produce both colour and black and white film under the Impossible label by December, coinciding with the projected date that existing stocks will run out.
Originally Posted by andino
Haha blckdouttc - Jon is right haha I bumped the fstop because i wanted more in focus before the neck
Jon - LOL!
Jon - LOL!
was there not a better setting to take the guitar pics against?
Nice read. I still have my Polaroid camera somewhere. I'm gonna find it tomorrow and take a picture of it lol.
Originally Posted by andino
Haha blckdouttc - Jon is right haha I bumped the fstop because i wanted more in focus before the neck
Jon - LOL!
Jon - LOL!
When I had a guitar I just used something as simple as a wall for the background. If u put it near the window u can use the natural light for lighting. Using the blinds to control the amount of light.
if they bring back polaroid, Ill buy a camera and actually dedicate sets of just polaroids on my flickr for artistic value. The quality of the images are so bad that it can be deemed as iconic pop art.
only drawback with that style of photography is that at times its vaguely creepy looking.
only drawback with that style of photography is that at times its vaguely creepy looking.









