Ancient fisheye experiment continued
A bird
And, why not, same bird
Ready to fly the airshow
The Big Bang
Ohio farm in infrared
Woodland stream on an IR day
It begins
The castle in The Plains
Pretty between ugly
Someone paid no attention . . .
College: Do not enter
Bravehat
When good colors go bad
Sunday stroll on Court Street
Jake apparently was here
Not technically a motorcycle . . .
"Eyed" click beetle
"Eyed" click beetle -- another view
Street textures
Every journey begins with a single step . . .
In the good old days
It's a male
Navajo Potter at Four Corners
End of a lakeshore run
A little experiment, part I
A little experiment, part II
Evening's amusement
When you absolutely, positively want to eat
Tea and Sweeties
Multicultural indeed
Just for fun
It is Easter. The Lord shines in glory.
The Easter Vigil is ended
Austin is honored
Receiving the Host for the first time
The new Catholics await their first Holy Communion
Preparing for the Communion Sacrifice of the newly…
And now there are ten new Catholics
They receive the Sign of the Cross . . .
Previously baptized people, called "candidates" .…
In many ways, a summation of Easter Vigil
As with the light earlier, the joy spreads
Welcoming new Catholics is joyous
One catechumen is to be baptized
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Ancient fisheye experiment


This was taken using a 10mm OP fisheye Nikkor -- on a Leica M4. It was at Fox Photo in Columbia, Mo., where the Nikon salesman was visiting and demonstrating new products one weekend in 1970. I stacked on the M4 first a Leica M mount to Leica screw adapter, then a Canon SLR to Leica screw adapter, then a Nikon F to Canon SLR adapter, after which I stuck on the Nikon fisheye just to see what would happen. This is what happened. It was taken with 2475 Recording Film at some ungodly high ASA and processed in the trick 2475 developer. The experiment was technically a success but a practical failure. Not that I would have ever spent the price of a whole camera with several lenses on a fisheye, anyway, even if I'd had the money, which I didn't. Fisheyes tend to be kind of cliches. (If you look closely, you can see some interesting things on the "used" shelf, including two Olympus Pen F bodies, some Pen F lenses, and a 16mm Bolex movie camera.) At right there are signs for "Circus Showtime," which was a promotion of Kodak Carousel slide projectors. It is sad to think how many people now have never seen or used a slide projector or a projection screen. They should have to suffer as we did!
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