It is Russian a Zorki 2C.The Russians copied it and called it a Zorki 4 I believe
Won't get it until Wednesday, bought off ebay, will certainly post when I've taken some.I am sure the members would love to see some of your images. I too have a certian amount of nostalgia for film cameras
I have 3 top of the range digital cameras, but just fancied going back to basics and film.
Leice, Fuji, Nikon, and a small coolpix.What are the top of the range digital cameras?
Leice, Fuji, Nikon, and a small coolpix.
Phew, i thought i was the only one who didn`t throw old techie stuff away. I`ve got more cables than the old Maplin stores!I have two drawers upstairs full of stuff as shown below. Cables for obsolete printers, computers etc. My first digital camera a Casio which used compact flash cards with a massive 32Mb memory. Something called 'Shanghai Moons Automation' ... I've forgotten what I used it for ... I suppose Google would tell me.
Other items as can be seen ... I didn't look in the other drawer, I think it is full of chargers ...
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It's everyone's own choice what is the best.They all say theirs is the BEST.
Just what I needed a picture of what's in your draws on a SundayI have two drawers upstairs full of stuff as shown below. Cables for obsolete printers, computers etc. My first digital camera a Casio which used compact flash cards with a massive 32Mb memory. Something called 'Shanghai Moons Automation' ... I've forgotten what I used it for ... I suppose Google would tell me.
Other items as can be seen ... I didn't look in the other drawer, I think it is full of chargers ...
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I have 3 top of the range digital cameras, but just fancied going back to basics and film.
The Casio camera seen in #8 was bought in 1999. It used AA batteries and old style Compact Flash memory cards. It was too large to fit in my pocket when visiting the grandkids so I bought a compact and the Casio lay unused. Recently I put some new batteries in but a message showed 'need to format the memory card' and it would not.
It took quite decent close-up photos as shown below.
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Brilliant pic your uncle took.Here is a slide taken by my late uncle in the 60s, but this is with a dedicated slide scanner and with much dirt removed.
I think reproducing them digitally and looking with a tablet is much better than sitting in a dark room with a projector!
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Is that Woolacombe?In the 1970s I took lots of 35mm slide pics but could only look at them with a small viewer. I fitted the previously mentioned Casio camera to a wooden jig positioned 2" from a slide held in a cardboard holder with a back light behind it and photographed about a 100 of them to view in a computer. A sample below and looking at it now there is darkening at the corners but these days I could easily remedy that with an image editor.
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Now can one of you give me the answer to her final question which was 'What are they all for?'
Yes Bob it is Woolacombe and I have quite a few similar pics in the Woolacombe thread ...Is that Woolacombe?
Bob
This thread keeps reviving old memories. A couple of slide photos from 1972. We went there year after year - a lovely place - such happy times ...
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Me and my Son.
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My late wife and my son.
A warm sunny glow has appeared around the photos...