Monthly Archives: August 2009

New Polaroid camera????

TIP

A bit more news over at The Impossible project. Their latest press release has this little titbit in it…

The Impossible Project – Camera
Re-positioning Instant Photography, Impossible will start selling a new Instant camera in the end of
2010. This camera will be a homage to the high quality photographic cameras of the golden
Polaroid years, transformed to the new analog customers of present times. Like the legendary SX-
70 camera, introduced in 1972, the new instant camera will feature a high quality glass lens
system, manual settings for professional photography as well as carefully developed unique and
characteristic design.
The development of this new Integral Instant Camera will be supported by Mr. Henny Waanders,
former head of camera development at Polaroid. Mr. Waanders is the brain behind many unique
Polaroid cameras and the best expert worldwide to transfer his unique expertise of Polaroid
cameras into a new modern interpretation of an Instant camera.

Whoohaaaa! That sounds a little bit exciting.

7 Tips for Perfect Sunrise and Sunset Photos

If you are one of those people that can actually drag themselves out of bed in the morning, you will sometimes be rewarded with stunning sunrises. If this is new to you, and you want to maximise your chances of that magical shot, have a read of the article linked below.

I have been asked a number of times why do sunrises when you can do sunsets? In my humblest of opinions, I think you get two different types of light. I don’t know what it is, but mornings tend to feel more metallic than afternoon light.

Here are two photos, one morning, one afternoon. Apart from a lot of people knowing I live on the East coast of Australia, which makes guessing very easy, it would be hard to tell which was which.

Streaks of light

On Golden Pond

7 Tips for Perfect Sunrise and Sunset Photos « Photobird Daily.

An Introduction to Time Lapse Photography

If you have ever wondered how the clever people make time lapse videos out of their photos, wonder no more. Mark Evans has written a guide to time lapse photography over at smashandpeas.com. If you want to have a go at it yourself, and it really isn’t very hard at all, have a read of his terrific guide.

Here is one I prepared earlier.

An Introduction to Time Lapse Photography.

23 Digital Photography Book Reviews [RANKED]

For those times you just can’t be arsed going out with the camera, but still feel the need to immerse your self in all things photographic, how about a book? Darren Rowse over at DPS has taken the leg work out of it for you and ranked what he thinks is the top 23 Digital Photography books out there.

23 Digital Photography Book Reviews [RANKED].

The Golden Hour Calculator

Golden light, photographers love it. Apparently, so do romantics, who knew? If you are a photographer, or a budding Casanova, the link below will help you figure out exactly what time the sun is coming up or going to bed. And it has a calendar, so you can plan ahead. Certainly worth a look see.

Wet feet

The Golden Hour Calculator | Sunrise and Sunset information for photographers.

Hiroshima, 64 years ago.

The lastest instalment of the the Big Picture is about the 64th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. From the site…

August 6th, marks 64 years since the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan by the United States at the end of World War II. Targeted for military reasons and for its terrain (flat for easier assessment of the aftermath), Hiroshima was home to approximately 250,000 people at the time of the bombing. The U.S. B-29 Superfortress bomber “Enola Gay” took off from Tinian Island very early on the morning of August 6th, carrying a single 4,000 kg (8,900 lb) uranium bomb codenamed “Little Boy”. At 8:15 am, Little Boy was dropped from 9,400 m (31,000 ft) above the city, freefalling for 57 seconds while a complicated series of fuse triggers looked for a target height of 600 m (2,000 ft) above the ground. At the moment of detonation, a small explosive initiated a super-critical mass in 64 kg (141 lbs) of uranium. Of that 64 kg, only .7 kg (1.5 lbs) underwent fission, and of that mass, only 600 milligrams was converted into energy – an explosive energy that seared everything within a few miles, flattened the city below with a massive shockwave, set off a raging firestorm and bathed every living thing in deadly radiation. Nearly 70,000 people are believed to have been killed immediately, with possibly another 70,000 survivors dying of injuries and radiation exposure by 1950. Today, Hiroshima houses a Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum near ground zero, promoting a hope to end the existence of all nuclear weapons. (34 photos total)

This one isn’t for the feint of heart.

Hiroshima, 64 years ago – The Big Picture – Boston.com.