I Found a Bar In LA With a Photo Booth That Uses Real Film
Taken from The Combustion Chamber
Taken from The Combustion Chamber
Original caption reads, “Dennis Stock’s famous image of James Dean in Times Square, marked with Pablo Inirio’s printing notations.”
via the literate lens
photographs of the Sun by Alan Friedman
Via PetaPixel
In this age of digital, film still remains as the medium of choice for some and there has always been a challenge in getting your Analogue captures into a sharable format without the time consuming process of scanning.
The Lomography community serves as an example of how film has flourished and remained as a truly inspirational medium. So it’s not a surprise that a Kickstarter project has surfaced from that community. It’s a very simple concept that will allow people to preserve and share their old film shots, while sparking others to participate in the world of film.
The Lomography Smartphone Film Scanner
Window Seat is an amazing series of photographs by Julieanne Kost.
via Flavorwire
It’s great to see what’s possible when Adobe Lightroom is in the right hands.
Crazy to think this isn’t the deserts of Nevada, but the planet Mars:
via MSNBC PhotoBlog
via Olivier Stevens. He has a pretty good stream over at flickr. Worth a look.
via Life
Found this chair all by its lonesome underneath the Manhattan Bridge a few weeks back. Shot this on an old Minolta Autocord I picked up on eBay. Analog is dead. Long live analog.
This year for xmas, I got a Holga lens for my Canon SLR. It’s a great toy. I’ve been playing with it ever since I got it. There’s nothing like slapping 25 bucks worth of lens on a thousand dollar camera.
All images via my flickr stream
via Chris Glass
This is from one of my favorite photography sites. Chris Glass is a hell of a picture taker. Rollover his pics, and he even shows you what the image looked like before he put it through photoshop.
Featuring a super-wide angle lens, this panoramic analog camera captures the width of film including the sprockets. Each frame is 106 degrees, the length of two standard 35mm frames.
via MoMA Store