Revenki's photos with the keyword: slide
Ceci n'est pas un Magritte (Cropped and Color Adju…
Frandor
20 Dec 2009 |
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I've never heard of Wrigley's supermarket or Federal's, but I still instantly recognized this as Frandor in East Lansing, Michigan's second shopping mall.
The Michigan National Bank branch is just to the right of center, the sign on the nearest lightpost is for "Grinnell's Parking" (Grinnell's being another business I'd never heard of before), there appears to be a red sign for a Fanny Farmer store just to the left side of the bent-over shrub, and the red signage just visible over the roof of the central building appears to read (in reverse) "EAT HOMADE".
More on Frandor of yesteryear at Lost Lansing. Apparently the place has been redeveloped/updated since the last time I saw it.
Open Wide
20 Dec 2009 |
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A C-124 Globemaster II , on display at the same open-house shown in the other slides.
Barnyard Beagles
Ceci n'est pas un Magritte
Schaberg House
16 Dec 2009 |
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A pretty interesting house probably somewhere in northwest lower Michigan, circa 1955.
Anyone recognize it?
--> Thanks, zakkillroy!
Schaberg House
16 Dec 2009 |
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A pretty interesting house probably somewhere in northwest lower Michigan, circa 1955.
Anyone recognize it?
--> Thanks, zakkillroy!
Schaberg House
16 Dec 2009 |
|
A pretty interesting house probably somewhere in northwest lower Michigan, circa 1955.
Anyone recognize it?
--> Thanks, zakkillroy!
Schaberg House
16 Dec 2009 |
|
A pretty interesting house probably somewhere in northwest lower Michigan, circa 1955.
Anyone recognize it?
--> Thanks, zakkillroy! (fixed orientation)
Fly the Friendly Skies
14 Dec 2009 |
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A military transport plane, from one of my uncle's slides from the 1950s. Note the family in civilian attire approaching the nose of the plane, and the jet engine on the yellow test rig in the background.
The plane appears to be a Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar. The nose marking on the plane reads "6614 ATS", the number on the nosewheel door is "8048" (possibly identifying it as number 51-8048). This census site doesn't include a plane with "8048" as a number, so it's not one of the surviving copies apparently.
If you look carefully, it appears that the plane has its tail doors open.
Dream Kitchen, Circa 1955
14 Dec 2009 |
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Note the stainless steel and copper appliances and fixtures - very trendy. I rented a house in college with nearly identical cabinets and a black linoleum countertop.
(From one of my uncle's slides.)
Mercury Monument, Then and Now
04 Sep 2009 |
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The image on the left is from a slide taken by my grandparents in early 1965, the one on the left I took in August 2009, showing the same scene today.
Unfortunately, the printed image I was using as a reference was not complete, cutting off at the corner of the pedestal. It was also nearly impossible with my D-80 to get the perspective to match the original image, even while crouching down to simulate an old slide camera held at chest height (judging by the crossbar on the monument, I obviously didn't crouch down enough).
The people in the photo are other tourists, no connection to my grandparents (ie: I don't know who they are).
LC-17, Then and Now
04 Sep 2009 |
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On the left, an old slide taken by my grandparents in early 1965. On the right, the same area today, if not quite the same view.
I'm still not convinced that the slide isn't backwards and taken from the coastal side of the towers. The orientation guide here was the equipment on the top of the towers, which is shaped vaguely like a slipper, and is plainly visible in both shots - the problem was, the new shots taken from the coastal side of the towers match up even less well.
LC-34, Then and Now
04 Sep 2009 |
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On the left, a slide taken by my grandparents in early 1965, on the right the same view in August 2009.
In the old image, the mobile service structure for LC-34 is visible in the distance, along with the umbilical tower at one of the LC-37 pads (the skinny reddish mast at the far left of the old image).
Interestingly, in the original versions of both pictures, I can tell that the second sign along the road is the same in both pictures, the first sign (with the words "Road Block" on it) might be the same but it's hard to tell, and the flame deflectors are visible in the same parked positions. Even the notch in the edge of the pavement at the corner is the same, and some of the telephone poles may even be originals.
What's odd is the sense of depth between the two pictures. There's no mistaking they show the same scene, but the pad looks significantly closer to the camera in my shot than in the old slide - and this is the case for several of these comparisons.
Unlike the other comparisons, the slide image is cropped square - this was because the original was rotated by about 3 degrees, which was enough to obscure some of the similarities at first glance.
LC-14, Then and Now
04 Sep 2009 |
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The top left image is from a slide taken by my grandparents in early 1965. The upper right image is the same view from August 2009.
The lower image is what is left of the launch facility, hidden now by the foliage on the righthand side of the access road -- the mound on the left is the launch control blockhouse, and straight ahead is the rocket launch mount and the foundation for the red launch umbilical tower seen in the older image. The tower itself is I think the one shown in other images in my KSC tour set, laid out in segments in a parking lot at the nearby rocket park.
Compare: VAB, 1965 and 2009
14 Aug 2009 |
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The image on the left is scanned from a slide my grandparents shot while driving around Cape Canaveral/Kennedy Space Center in early 1965. The picture on the right was taken on August 7, 2009 from roughly the same location (about 10 yards back), showing the area as it looks today (the wider angle of the photo on the right is indicated by the desaturated area).
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