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Thread: RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

  1. #11
    Founder QT Luong's Avatar
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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    Richard, whenever you'd like to post a notebook entry, you just post like a normal message on the forum, but as a category, you choose "Photographers Notebook. Richard Boulware" (which is to be found alphabetically on the list of categories). Only you will be able to initiate messages in that category. Of course, once an entry is posted, anybody can comment, just like on any other thread or article. As soon as you post the first entry, I will link the
    category from the home page. If you need to make corrections, just email the moderators.

  2. #12

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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    Richard,
    twenty years ago the fastest films were not what they are today. To rerun the test and make the announcement after seems to me to be more honest. By the way, fireflies at 50' away can be cought by todays fast films without any problem. Astronomers know it all too well.

  3. #13

    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    Answers, and od's 'n ends.

    Twenty years ago I was doing a graphic arts photo project for the local phone company and was experimenting with Eastman #2475 high speed recording film (35mm). A few years earlier, I had received a call from an old college classmate, Larry Dale Gordon who was a staffer at Playboy in Chicago. He sent me some #2475 and suggested processing in a diluted solution of Dektol. At that time it only had a Kodak 'SO' number on it. I had a blast with this technique and ASA's were in the range of 8000. I still use this combination for graphic and design stuff but accept the fact that your Gama increases to the 'off the chart' number and prints will look like Navajo sand paintings. Does make for interesting graphics and does have its uses...although limited.

    Night vision. In the first Navy training session on night vision a dozen of us were ushered into a tiny theater, which was totally dark. Or at least we thought it was. After about 30 minutes someone in the darkness said he thought he saw something. At about 45 minutes we did begin to make out some images. At about seventy minutes we could see tiny buildings and the instructor came in and started his lecture about night vision. By the end of the lecture an hour later, we could see an entire city in miniature before us, and the lecturer was talking about the WWII terminology of 'bombers moon'. The light from a single tiny bulb was calibrated to equal the light of a full moon over the target. After the lecture and the lights went on I saw the tiny bulb which was shielded from direct view of the audience. It was a tiny 12V bulb about the size of a grain of wheat...like hobbyist use. ..and the model of the city scape was about ten by twelve feet and the tiny bulb was hung and shielded about eight feet above the tiny city. You can speed up your night vision senses by wearing cherry red goggles before...and cut the time about in half. I have seen them at military surplus stores. I don't really care what anybody says about "Ten minutes" to full acclimation. It just isn't true. Ever see a color shot of the pilot ready room? During night operations, it is completely lit with only red light...as is your cockpit instrument cluster when flying at night.

    QT...thanks for the posting information. I appreciate your assistance very much.

    Generally, I truly appreciate the support and encouragement many have expressed on this board for my writing. I am not a professional writer, so you might have to cut me a little slack, but I will do my best to honestly address issues and answer sincere questions with sincere answers. If you don't like my viewpoint...fine. If some would like just pick a fight for the sake of picking a fight...go ahead. That is why God put a 'delete' key on my computer. I will not waste my time with anybody who takes this approach.

    I feel a great sense of responsibility in starting this project, and I have an obligation to be a frank and factual as I know how. This is my promise. Wish me luck.

  4. #14

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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    Have you tried the test with the Eastman film blasted at 8000ASA?

  5. #15

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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    Let me tell you it in this way - film is much, much more sensitive to the light than a human eye. That's why you can take astronomical pictures with colors that the eye can never see. If you give a film enough time it can pick light that your eye doesn't see at all. Therefore if you have these lights, visible to your eyes in a darkroom, whatever (literally whatever!) film will get fogged if you give him enough time. Sorry for the laws of physics...

  6. #16
    Michael Jones's Avatar
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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    Richard:

    Please keep writing. Just recall that as on a summer night, gnats fly about. The best plan is to ignore them since they are small and inconsequential. Thanks.

    Mike
    “You can’t have everything. Where would you put it?”

  7. #17

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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    What Mike said! Keep writing, Richard, and ignore that BS fart-ist trawling for attention. There's at least one on every forum. Don't dignify It with a response. It ain't worth it.

  8. #18
    Format Omnivore Brian C. Miller's Avatar
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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    "Wish me luck."

    LUCK!!
    "It's the way to educate your eyes. Stare. Pry, listen, eavesdrop. Die knowing something. You are not here long." - Walker Evans

  9. #19
    Mark Sawyer's Avatar
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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    The glow-in-the-dark paint is wonderful stuff. I put several small dots in my film-loading room, and found it eliminated the slight vertigo I got in total darkness. I would let it "calm down" a bit between turning off the lights and loading/developing the film, having a healthy paranoia about stray light and film...

    Actually, I liked the effect so much that I put little dots all over my bedroom ceiling, and would charge them up with a 250 watt bulb before going to bed at night, (covering my eyes while it was on, of course). Nothing like sleeping under the stars.

    Good practical advice, Richard!
    "I love my Verito lens, but I always have to sharpen everything in Photoshop..."

  10. #20
    tim atherton's Avatar
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    RE: "Photographers Notebook"....

    "Brian, Ten minutes are fine for in a darkroom, but dark rooms don't travel at
    mach .8---when flying always stack the deck in your favor! ;-) "

    Infantrymen don't travel at mach .8 - even these days - 20 mintues was always the standard time to acheive basic night visi0on in the British Army... - wow - that brought flashbacks of slightly surreal Service Kinema Corporation late 60's early 70's training films about rods and cones... and how to spot Soviet troops at dawn and dusk
    You'd be amazed how small the demand is for pictures of trees... - Fred Astaire to Audrey Hepburn

    www.photo-muse.blogspot.com blog

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