evan_bedford2 Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 I used to despise those ugly things. I much preferred the little window. However, I now know the real reason for them. They're perfect picture frames for commemorative stamps. The slots are about the right size for most commemoratives, and there's no shortage of themes to choose from. As for film info, that's what masking tape, a sharpie pen and the bottom of a camera body are for. The one shown below is apt, since on the other side of the camera is a shift lens. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
davecaz Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Heheh. That works if you shoot only one camera and/or one type of film at a time. I've recently had five cameras in mid-roll, and three of them lacked meters. So, knowing what's inside them at any given time can be important, especially when it can take months to finish shooting a roll. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PapaTango Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 What's a stamp used for? 1 "I See Things..." The FotoFora Community Experience [Link] A new community for creative photographers. Come join us! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rodeo_joe1 Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 How much paint is left on the bottom of your camera after you've ripped the masking tape off a few dozen times. The frame on the camera back is just the right size for the lid ripped from a film box, or could be used for a square of card, paper or 'ivorine' that's just as easy to write on as a strip of masking tape. Why do some people insist on making life more complicated than necessary? "I much preferred the little window." - How much will you prefer it when its foam seal decays and your film gets completely fogged? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PapaTango Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Dang Joe, did you check your blood pressure this morning??? :eek::p:) "I See Things..." The FotoFora Community Experience [Link] A new community for creative photographers. Come join us! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chuck909 Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Or you could put your name and address there so that if you loose your camera, it will get returned to you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sandy Vongries Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Or you could put your name and address there so that if you loose your camera, it will get returned to you. :rolleyes:o_O Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moving On Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 I keep a journal aided by the little simple end flap .......Simple enough. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BeBu Lamar Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 The OP is abusive. I would never write on my camera. I like the slot although I never used it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bill Bowes Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 I do not believe anyone designing cameras in the 50's - late 60's period had a clue to this little do-dad camera addition. With 6 cameras & 3 film types floating around my apartment, small semi-permanent sticky labels are used to keep my aging brain on the right track. Aloha, Bill 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sandy Vongries Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Leica M-3, Nikon F mid 50's, mid '60's respectively 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
davecaz Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Or, for Millenials, they could print one of their gazillion selfies and slot it in there, to enhance the beauty of the camera. ;) Of course, they'd probably need to ask a Boomer how to print a hardcopy of a photo. :rolleyes: Leica M-3, Nikon F mid 50's, mid '60's respectively [ATTACH]1243994[/ATTACH] [ATTACH]1243995[/ATTACH] I have a couple of cameras that have similar doodads. I suppose they're useful, but I always worry that they may have been accidentally moved to the wrong speed or emulsion (B&W vs. color). They're also so non-standardized that they're almost more work than they're worth. I'd much rather take a quick glance at a box top and know exactly what's inside than have to figure out what the doodad is telling me, and whether it matches up with my recollection, or not. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sandy Vongries Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Agreed, they are relatively easy to move. You do have to remember that back in those days the "neverready case" was fairly popular which gave the gadget some or full protection. Color & Monochrome are probably most useful. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
evan_bedford2 Posted May 4, 2018 Author Share Posted May 4, 2018 (edited) Why do some people insist on making life more complicated than necessary? "I much preferred the little window." - How much will you prefer it when its foam seal decays and your film gets completely fogged? I had to replace a foam seal the other day. With an exacto knife, I took me less than 5 minutes. Edited May 4, 2018 by evan_bedford|2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
evan_bedford2 Posted May 4, 2018 Author Share Posted May 4, 2018 The OP is abusive. I would never write on my camera. I like the slot although I never used it. Abusive? I'm honoring the slot by treating it as a frame. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
evan_bedford2 Posted May 4, 2018 Author Share Posted May 4, 2018 What's a stamp used for? I've heard that some people like to look at them. Other than that...hmm...I'm not quite sure, now that you mention it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BeBu Lamar Posted May 4, 2018 Share Posted May 4, 2018 Abusive? I'm honoring the slot by treating it as a frame. Abuse by writing on the bottom of the camera. When I put my camera down it's on a mat to protect its bottom. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ben_hutcherson Posted May 4, 2018 Share Posted May 4, 2018 Or, for Millenials, they could print one of their gazillion selfies and slot it in there, to enhance the beauty of the camera. ;) Of course, they'd probably need to ask a Boomer how to print a hardcopy of a photo. :rolleyes: Or perhaps a boomer who thinks that film isn't made anymore could ask a millenial like me to make a print in his darkroom... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
evan_bedford2 Posted May 4, 2018 Author Share Posted May 4, 2018 Abuse by writing on the bottom of the camera. When I put my camera down it's on a mat to protect its bottom. Nothing is written on the camera. It's written on a small square of masking tape. Please read the post. And relax (life is short). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stuart_pratt Posted May 4, 2018 Share Posted May 4, 2018 I just open the camera back and check the film speed on the canister (Who hasn't turned their darkroom main light on to see how the print is developing!) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JDMvW Posted May 4, 2018 Share Posted May 4, 2018 I usually used a torn and folded film box end in the flash/auxiliary holder. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
davecaz Posted May 5, 2018 Share Posted May 5, 2018 I've heard that some people like to look at them. Other than that...hmm...I'm not quite sure, now that you mention it.[ATTACH=full]1244024[/ATTACH] And there's a great example of why Karsh is considered one of the great portrait photographers. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
davecaz Posted May 5, 2018 Share Posted May 5, 2018 Or perhaps a boomer who thinks that film isn't made anymore could ask a millenial like me to make a print in his darkroom... Behold! We have a unicorn among us! :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JDMvW Posted May 5, 2018 Share Posted May 5, 2018 And there's a great example of why Karsh is considered one of the great portrait photographers. My favorite punching bag, A. D. Coleman, gave Karsh this review A D Coleman in "Shows We've Seen" Popular Photography 1973-08 Yousuf Karsh, at the Albright-Knox Museum, Buffalo, N.Y. (March 27-May 6). Since the work of Yousuf Karsh has evidenced neither change nor growth over the past quarter-century, a retrospective exhibit like this-whose usual function is to demonstrate the development of an artist's lines of inquiry-only serves to point up the limitation arid monotony of Karsh's uninventive style. The triviality of his body of work is manifest in the fact that there is little to be said about it now that could not easily have been said 20 years ago. Karsh seems to me perhaps the most overrated photographer of our century, one whose reputation is based on an entirely sterile, repetitive, and banal accumulation of images. His output reminds me of nothing so much as the countless changes rung by those hack painters who frequent summertime outdoor art festivals on the theme of the sad-eyed kitten or the clown on velvet. Overstylized, stilted, utterly without life or insight, Karsh's portraits apparently fill some continuing cultural need for kitsch caricatures of the world's superstars. Karsh, as a cultural phenomenon incarnate, functions as an equalizer of sorts, reducing everyone who comes before his lens to a depersonalized gargoyle. The resulting grotesqueries display-I presume unintentionally-Karsh's inability to relegate his acclaimed lighting technique to its proper place. Its total domination of virtually every image in this show points up just how much a slave Karsh is to his style and his equipment-a sad and sorry sight. The only reason, in fact, that I bother to write about this exhibit at all is that it is the largest photographic show mounted at the prestigious Albright-Knox since that institution's courageous presentation of a controversial Photo-Secession exhibit back in 1910. Granted, the Albright-Knox has coasted on that early venturesomeness far too long. Nevertheless, to mar that unblemished record by making this ghastly travesty of photography its second major plunge into the medium was, from an historical and esthetic standpoint, the very worst kind of curatorial irresponsibility. This seemed another good reason (aside from his championing of Mortensen) for not respecting Coleman all that much. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
evan_bedford2 Posted May 5, 2018 Author Share Posted May 5, 2018 My favorite punching bag, A. D. Coleman, gave Karsh this review A D Coleman in "Shows We've Seen" Popular Photography 1973-08 Yousuf Karsh, at the Albright-Knox Museum, Buffalo, N.Y. (March 27-May 6). Since the work of Yousuf Karsh has evidenced neither change nor growth over the past quarter-century, a retrospective exhibit like this-whose usual function is to demonstrate the development of an artist's lines of inquiry-only serves to point up the limitation arid monotony of Karsh's uninventive style. The triviality of his body of work is manifest in the fact that there is little to be said about it now that could not easily have been said 20 years ago. Karsh seems to me perhaps the most overrated photographer of our century, one whose reputation is based on an entirely sterile, repetitive, and banal accumulation of images. His output reminds me of nothing so much as the countless changes rung by those hack painters who frequent summertime outdoor art festivals on the theme of the sad-eyed kitten or the clown on velvet. Overstylized, stilted, utterly without life or insight, Karsh's portraits apparently fill some continuing cultural need for kitsch caricatures of the world's superstars. Karsh, as a cultural phenomenon incarnate, functions as an equalizer of sorts, reducing everyone who comes before his lens to a depersonalized gargoyle. The resulting grotesqueries display-I presume unintentionally-Karsh's inability to relegate his acclaimed lighting technique to its proper place. Its total domination of virtually every image in this show points up just how much a slave Karsh is to his style and his equipment-a sad and sorry sight. The only reason, in fact, that I bother to write about this exhibit at all is that it is the largest photographic show mounted at the prestigious Albright-Knox since that institution's courageous presentation of a controversial Photo-Secession exhibit back in 1910. Granted, the Albright-Knox has coasted on that early venturesomeness far too long. Nevertheless, to mar that unblemished record by making this ghastly travesty of photography its second major plunge into the medium was, from an historical and esthetic standpoint, the very worst kind of curatorial irresponsibility. This seemed another good reason (aside from his championing of Mortensen) for not respecting Coleman all that much. Gee, I wish Coleman had told us how he REALLY felt. (wow) Karsh certainly didn't depersonalize Churchill. He intentionally got him p___ed off during the shoot, in order to get the iconic growl. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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