HaarFager's photos with the keyword: Television
Sweetness
31 Aug 2024 |
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Walter Payton, a running back for the Chicago Bears football team, was known as "Sweetness" for his moves carrying the football. This was a screen capture of my television during a game Chicago played against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
For this photo, I remember that the local newspaper in my town had loaned me one of their telephoto lenses because they used a Minolta like I did. This was taken at a distance from my TV and zoomed in on just part of the screen.
Camera: Minolta XD11
Lens: Minolta MD Rokkor-X 50mm, f/1.2
Film: Kodak Kodacolor 100
Date: October 22nd, 1978
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Minolta KSF 5035 NASCAR NFL 19hf
The U.S.S. Enterprise.
11 Nov 2022 |
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This is the very first negative I ever shot on Kodak Tri-X black and white film. And it was just a couple years ago that I found it. Actually, I uncovered it. When the lab was developing this roll, they had tape over the beginning, which covered up this negative two numbers before the properly named number 1 negative. I removed the tape, washed off the tape residue and it revealed this first ever shot I took. Pretty important to me!
Camera: Konica Autoreflex TC
Lens: Konica Hexanon 50mm, f/1.7
Film: Kodak Tri-X, 400 ASA black and white film
Date: February 12th, 1978
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Konica Tri-X Star Trek 00ef
Unknown Camera
01 Nov 2022 |
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This is a screen capture from an episode of "Mannix" I watched just the other night. Joe is holding a camera, but you can't tell what kind it is because the names have been taped over.
Gee, I wonder what kind of camera it is?
Book 'Em, Danno!
13 Sep 2020 |
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A picture of the television screen during my favorite show. Or at least the DVD version during one of the menu screens.
Camera: Minolta XG-7
Lens: Soligor MC C/D Zoom + Macro 35-140mm, f/3.8, @65mm and macro
Film: Kodak Gold 100 (expired on 10/2011 and shot @25 ISO)
Shooting Program: Manual
Aperture: f/22
Shutter Speed: “B” (bulb) 5 seconds
Date: May 19th, 2020, 11.18 p.m.
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Developing Chemicals: Unicolor C-41
Water pre-soak: 1 minute at 102 degrees
Developer: 3 mins. and 30 secs. at 102 degrees
Water rinse: 2 minutes (to keep chemicals clean)
Blix: 6 ½ minutes at 102 degrees
Water rinse: 2 minutes at approx. 100 degrees
Stabilizer: 1 minute at room temperature
Water rinse: 2 minutes
Kodak Photo-Flo 200: 1 minute
Minolta XG-7 Kodak Gold 100 2020 12df
Hawaii Five-O Opening
30 Jul 2019 |
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A multiple exposure photo showing some opening frames from my favorite show, "Hawaii Five-O." The episode was called "The Bark And The Bite" and was broadcast first-run on February 8th, 1979. I would do multiple exposures like this because, one, it saved film by getting 9 pictures on one negative, and two, it was almost like those viewmaster reels that could show a movie in as little as seven frames.
Camera: Minolta XD11
Lens: Minolta MD Rokkor-X 50mm, f/1.2
Film: Kodak Kodacolor
Shooting Program: Manual
Date: February 8th, 1979
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Minolta KSF 5035 Feb 1979 07jf
The Immunity Syndrome
30 May 2019 |
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The episode of Star Trek, entitled "The Immunity Syndrome." The Enterprise and crew come upon this giant amoeba in space and have to defeat it. I ended up watching this very episode tonight!
Camera: Minolta XD11
Lens: Minolta MD Rokkor-X 50mm, f/1.2
Film: Kodak Kodacolor VR 100 ASA
Date: December 31st, 1983
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Minolta XD11 Kodak CP100-5094 24df
Steve McGarrett
19 Apr 2019 |
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An episode of Hawaii Five-O, featuring a pensive Steve McGarrett. Taken off the television screen. The episode was "The Sunday Torch."
Camera: Konica Autoreflex TC
Lens: Hexanon AR 50mm, f/1.7
Film: Kodak Kodacolor 100 35mm
Date: August 2nd, 1978
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Konica KSF 5035 25ff
The U.S.S. Enterprise
28 Apr 2018 |
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I used to take pictures like this of the tv screen, so I resurrected the practice to try out my new camera.
Camera: Bell & Howell Auto 35 Reflex
Lens: Canon EX 50mm, f/1.8
Film: Fuji Superia X-Tra 400 color (cross-processed for black and white)
Shooting Program: Manual
Aperture: f/8
Shutter Speed: 1/250 of a sec.
Date: August 3rd, 2016, 7.08 p.m.
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
Developing Chemicals:
Adox Adonal: Stand development, 1:150 @ 1.5 hours
Water Rinse: 30 secs.
Ilford Ilfostop Stopbath: 1 min.
Ilford Hypam Fixer: 8 mins.
Water Rinse: 3 mins.
Kodak PhotoFlo 200: 1 min.
B&H Auto 35 Superia X-Tra 400 X-Pro 25kf
The Wonderful World Of Color (And Black And White)
25 Nov 2017 |
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Back in the early 1960's, Disney had a show on television that changed it's title to reflect the use of color programming. It was called "The Wonderful World Of Color." That's where the title of my picture comes from. There are also some black and white shows represented in this group.
For the Saturday Self-Challenge group, who's theme this week was to use lots of colors.
The Dark And Bloody Ground
31 May 2016 |
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Back in the 1970s when The Rockford Files was on television, first run, I used to take pictures of it by pointing my film camera at the tv screen. We've progressed a long way since then. This shot of The Rockford Files, was taken today, May 31st, 2016, using a digital camera and while watching the episode on DVD. Oh, the times they are a' changing.
I shot this picture while testing my new (to me, anyway) HP Photosmart E317 5 megapixel digital camera.
T Minus 6
28 Jul 2015 |
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CBS Late Night
25 Jun 2015 |
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A shot of the television screen.
Camera: Minolta XD11
Lens: Minolta MD Rokkor-X 50mm, f/1.2
Film: Kodak Kodacolor, 100 ASA 35mm
Date: circa 1979
Location: Norris City, Illinois, U.S.A.
XD11 Kodak 5035 CBS 18gf
High Chaparral
02 Feb 2015 |
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My Mom, sister and me at the movie set for the television show, "The HIgh Chaparral." It was filmed in Southern Arizona, Old Tucson, to be exact. This was taken when it was still on the air, on February 8th, 1970. Looks like Dad must have taken it because Mom didn't want to be in pictures very often and was the family photographer.
Scanned from a wallet-sized photo.
Alias Smith and Jones
25 Mar 2014 |
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This image is one negative, with multiple exposures, and was taken with a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Flash 620 camera. It was of an episode of "Alias Smith and Jones" and as you can see, the storyline starts at the top right and goes down, then moves over left one row and repeats the process for all four rows. Also, almost half the images are from the opening titles and theme. Anyone who's ever used a Brownie Hawkeye will remember the subject is reversed in the viewfinder. I knew that, but forgot and thought I was starting at the top left of the frame.
There are some overlapping screens at the bottom of row two and I'll bet what happened was that I was waiting through the commercial break for the show to come back on and at the last second I decided to capture the information about the Solid Gold collection - just in case I wanted to order it for myself!
I used to have one of those GAF Viewmaster projectors and a bunch of reels in the 1970's, so I probably came up with the idea to try this in emulation of those. If anybody remembers the viewmaster reels, they were in 3-D and usually only had one reel of 7 different frames to encapsulate a whole movie, cartoon or television episode. Some of the more ambitious ones had two or more reels to tell the story better, but most only had one round "reel." I remember having the movie "The Love Bug," and there was only one reel for that. I need to see if I still have that reel or any others - maybe I can scan one of those!
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