Darin
Thanks for posting your review of the Book. After reading your detailed information I ordered and received it.
You are absolutely correct this is not a quick casual read. I'm on page 20 only 230 left. Small print for this aged eyes.
Darin
Thanks for posting your review of the Book. After reading your detailed information I ordered and received it.
You are absolutely correct this is not a quick casual read. I'm on page 20 only 230 left. Small print for this aged eyes.
Looks like a good purchase—and I had some Amazon dollars to spend.
Rick “on the way” Denney
And speaking of...
Just posted a follow-up post with the semi-clickbait title "Was Ansel Adams A Landscape Photographer?"
I was going to make it a list, which are so popular on Google. Something like "12 Reasons Why Ansel Adams Was Not A Landscape Photographer" (better suggestions welcome) but I haven't got this whole psychological manipulation thing down just yet.
https://www.abiggercamera.com/2020/1...-photographer/
Summary: Ansel shot a lot of other stuff.
Bonus: Photo I shot of a Judy Dater print of Ansel's manager Bill Turnage.
--Darin
As I now subscribe to Darin's Blog, his latest missive allerted to a book I want
East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Photography
https://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/2017...ssissippi.html
This railroad runs right down the Mississippi
1-Makanda track by TIN CAN COLLEGE, on Flickr
Tin Can
Nice review; looks like an interesting read.
As a 7x17 user I've been curious about Adams' work done with the 7x17 panorama format. It is mentioned in his list of cameras used and I know he did some of the Kodak Coloramas but is there any other known work he did with that format?
Unfortunately for me they never sent the Zoom #
"Thank you for registering for
Ansel Adams book talk with Rebecca Senf: Event registration
Dear Randy,
Thank you for registering to join our Ansel Adams talk with Rebecca Senf. We will send a Zoom link to all registered guests before Oct. 21."
Tin Can
Mark, I don't know if I told you, but I went to the estate sale of the UofA president that set up the CCP. I got a Leica camera of his (no doubt recommended by Ansel Adams), and several Adams books, inscribed by the author to him. I'm keeping them as a little set of the important Arizona connection between the two.
Garrett
flickr galleries
Thanks for the review! I just ordered a copy.
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
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