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martynas_photo

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  1. Malcolm, thanks for your suggestion, such course would definitely be beneficial to me. Not sure about this particular lens, though, slayed mercilessly and lying on my table breathless...:) Sorry, got carried away
  2. Hello, I have a 250mm lens for Mamiya TLR. It sat on a shelf for many years, since the shutter was not working and I never felt courageous enough to attempt a repair myself. However, this day has come, for good or bad and I have disassembled the lens. Carefully photographing each step, so that it would not end as most alarm clocks from my childhood... i.e. with parts on table after reassembly and still not functional for whatever reason:) The question/problem is as follows. the shutter can be wound and released. However, the blades do not open, neither the shutter times are correct, i.e. nothing changes while adjusting the shutter dial. I have carefully opened the lens, but I cannot understand which parts control the opening/closing of the shutter (I can do that manually, by moving the black parts, but cannot figure out the logic, which part (lever?) opens it and which one is responsible for closing). I would appreciate any help on the matter. Thanks in advance.
  3. <p>I printed yesterday. On an Epson inkjet. If the question was about darkroom - I did my last printing several years ago. Hell, I need to empty those tanks with developer and fixer, thanks for reminding:)</p>
  4. <p>Hello, just wanted to share the joy that all went well and the printer has safely arrived to its new home. Will share a pic or two after the studio is fully up and running. Thanks for your ideas everyone.</p>
  5. <p>Glenn, I just watched the episode you mentioned.... you were right, I should not have done that <em>before</em> moving the printer:)</p>
  6. <p>spoke today with the piano movers - they say it is manageable and that they will do the job (said they have moved similar machines in the past). walked the entire path with a ruler over the stairs and corridors, found out that it is no problem to move the printer to the second floor and then it will have to travel over a long corridor to another staircase to be moved to the third floor (the first staircase is too narrow between 2nd and 3rd floors)..<br /> i will surely take some pictures of the process, hopefully all will be well. thank you all for your suggestions and ideas</p>
  7. <p>Thank you all for your comments and ideas.<br /> Bill - it is a perfectly suitable location for a studio - very high ceiling, good location in the very heart of a city in 19th century building, low rent and so on. It is perfectly accessible for everyone walking his/her own feet, it is just not too user-friendly in terms of carrying something bulky and heavy. Actually, I have this space as an extension to my principal activity, which is theatre/event photography on location. So, most of my customers are artists (ballet and modern dancers, to be more precise) - they don't have a problem walking several stairs. I do not photograph family portraits with elderly people, infants, etc. Neither do I take pictures of products and other things that require additional setup/weight lifting every time. So, with or without printer I will move to these premises. The stairs are not too steep or narrow for normal day-to-day walking<br /> The printer is part of a side-business project, it is not strictly related to my studio work, except that the studio space is perfect for handling of large prints (drying, cutting, packaging for framing of prints up to 44 inch wide, etc. ). Also, having the printer in the same space cuts the rent cost (of having two separate premises for each activity).<br /> Gerry - thanks. the sole aspect that might be considered desperate is related to the moving of the printer:) I have no issues with either the location/premises of the studio, or my photographic career. And I do not photograph vases or jewelry:( It is just that there is this beast that needs to be somehow moved. If it turns out impossible or too risky - I will have to look for separate premises nearby to accommodate it. As that would be much easier than finding the premises for a studio (in fact, anything suitable for a photographic studio in the nearby location costs up to three times of what I'll be paying now).<br /> David - yes, I know how this printer is assembled/disassembled - bought it new. the best that can be achieved is shown in picture one (top part of the printer detached from the stand - alone it weighs around 250lb or 116 kg). this is the part that causes greatest concern<br /> Anyway, thank you all for your ideas. I just recalled that some time ago I photographed the opening eve of local Steinway office/shop, so I will give them a call, hopefully they will be able to recommend good piano movers.</p>
  8. <p>Sandy - definitely, only professionals will be hired. the damn thing is too expensive and it hasn't even paid off yet:)<br /> Piano movers is a brilliant idea, thank you.</p>
  9. <p>thanks for your input. I have thought about the cardboard dummy, just forgot to mention it in the post. So far I have examined the stairs with pocket tape measure, but the dummy is definitely better.<br /> I would expect the hired carrying guys to know their job (in terms of which method would be the most comfortable for them) - my duty is to prevent them from doing something that would damage the printer (like carrying it upwards/sideways, which might be more comfortable for them, but would most likely damage the unit, or putting it on one of its ends, etc). An idea about emergency support for leveling the printer if something goes wrong is good, thanks. <br /> I can't say how comfortable it is to carry this thing, but I am surprised Epson did not make any handles that would facilitate the job (as if ALL of the buyers were supposed to have premises where minimal effort to move the printer was required). What they did was put some anti-slip material underneath the printer body, for "better contact". When we moved the printer to its present location - the four guys simply picked it up and carried all the way from the entrance to the building to my studio. It was fairly heavy, but quite manageable, they said. And yes, that was a separate entrance from the street, with few stairs and lots of space for maneuvering. And now we need to move the printer using the internal staircase of the building, which is fairly narrow for this kind of undertaking.</p>
  10. <p>Hello all,<br /> I have a "heavy" problem - I need to move my photography studio (currently on the first floor) to the premises that are on a third floor of an old building, with fairly narrow stairs (around 1 meter width) and without any freight elevator. And I need to figure out how to move a large format Epson 9890 printer. It should not be heavily tilted, put on a side and so on - in fact, it should remain as even as possible during transport (actually - during moving, since all the action takes place in the same building). Another problem - once removed from its stand, it cannot be put down as the holders used to secure it on the stand would break. I have read all there was to read in the manual, but it says nothing about stairs. Moving the printer through a window from the outside (using a lift) is not an option, windows are too small.<br /> the dimensions of the beast are Width 26.26 inches (667 mm), Length 73.4 inches (1864 mm) and weight is 298 lb (135.1 kg) or ~116 kg without stand.<br /> while the staircase is theoretically ok for moving something of such dimensions, there will also be four strong men - and they need some space too. this is where I start seeing a problem that the staircase will be too narrow to accommodate the whole company. it would be ok if two men could carry it (dimensions-wise), but four...<br /> lifts for moving heavy things upstairs also don't seem suitable (they either require positioning the item in a way that is not good for this device (it's not a fridge, after all) or are just plain too large for the staircase (the ones with an even platform).<br /> I know it all sounds a bit desperate, but other premises for the studio are out of the question. Or, in the worst case scenario, I would have to rent yet another place just for the printer - but that would be totally inefficient from all perspectives.<br /> Perhaps someone has similar experience to share and how did you manage to move your equipment. Thanks in advance for your time.</p> <p> </p>
  11. I'd suggest getting a good monopod. Otherwise its all about the neck and lower back, as these are the parts that at the end of the day get most of the tension (especially when shooting action in lower light handheld). As long as you can lift a simple shopping bag out of your car - you should be fine with 70-200. And no, you don't want to this lens attached to any body hanging down your neck - use your shoulder and buy a comfortable strap for the purpose.
  12. <p>open the program, go to Edit>Preferences. In the General section make sure that the checkbox "Keep all steps active in edit list" is checked.</p>
  13. <p>it depends what series of cards you are looking at. Lexar's Professional line costs about the same as Sandisk's top products, I believe. Personally I have always used Lexar Professional series cards/card readers - none have failed so far (in 10 years). I also have some Lexar Platinum cards, performance-wise they don't seem any different from Professional series, yet they are cheaper.</p>
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