Troubleshooting Cyberspace

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I got home very late from an evening of troubleshooting various issues, and updating email configurations on all the desktop computers at the office after we upgraded and migrated the mail to a new server. After nearly 18 hours of messing with everything from medicating kitties, working on plumbing, negotiating road construction, and avoiding car crashes on wet streets, spending the evening troubleshooting email issues left me wanting to just plain shoot cyberspace.

Speed Graphic

 

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Continuing my adventures in film, I purchased a 4X5 Speed Graphic, Press Camera with money I got for my birthday. I wanted a 4X5 that was more portable, but since field cameras are still pricey, I started looking at press cameras, and decided I liked having the choice of using either the leaf shutter in the lens or the focal plane shutter in the body, and having the option to hand hold the camera.

I ended up with this particular camera because the seller guaranteed that everything worked, and he accepted my offer for the amount of the money I received for my birthday. I got it Wednesday, checked the shutters, the movements, the rangefinders, and indeed everything worked. It was pretty dirty, including the lens, so I took the camera and lens apart, and cleaned everything inside and out. Spunk helped and then participated when I photographed the camera — he wanted to point out the camera’s features and how it works. I looked up the serial numbers on the lens and the camera and it’s a Wartime model produced in 1945.

Thursday morning I went out and took four photos, processed them, and then printed two of the negatives before we went to Thanksgiving dinner at Laurie’s parent’s house in the early afternoon. I used Kodak Tri-X 320, but had the light meter set at ISO 400 and processed the film at ISO 400. I used the leaf shutter in the lens set at 1/400 sec and hand held the camera for the shots. The lens, at 127mm, is fairly wide-angle for a 4X5, therefore, in each photo I was trying to get as close to a group of cranes, and then a group of ducks as possible. The cranes and ducks flew so I snapped the photos of them taking flight, producing my first 4×5, hand-held actions shots.

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Cranes taking flight. ƒ/22, 1/400 sec, ISO 400

 

 

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Ducks taking flight. ƒ/8, 1/400 sec, ISO 400

 

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Another Annoying Cat Photo

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Another blogger asked for input on what annoys people. One person said people who post photos of cats on their blogs. So here is another annoying photo of a cat in my long tradition of being annoying and posting photos of cats on my blog. This particularly annoying photo is of Laurie carrying Guildenstern around the garden.

Miss Star Dust

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This composite photo includes a selfie of me with Rosencrantz on my lap and my Macbook Pro over a photo of my dad (under my hand) during WWII in England. He was clowning around with another serviceman by the shark mouth nose art on a B24 Bomber named Miss Star Dust.