For the benefit of an unlearned newbie, what is the ILC market?
Or perhaps he was the son of a third generation welfare family where no one could remember the last time any of the relatives had worked.
Have a Yashica 635, looks in mint condition, but don't have the 35mm adapter with it and the film transport doesn't work. May have the leather case, too. If interested, I will look. $75.00
Need some financial advice on what to do with the $20 million cash transfer from the personal assistant of an Indian Rajah that I'm waiting for. The money should be here any day now. How much do you want for that goldfish?
Have used AAA for over 40 years. Always good service with one exception. They had contracted with some poorly run wrecker service and the response was terrible. Within a short time, these losers were replaced with a more reputable group and service has been superb since. Have also used their travel agency a great deal in the past. Great customer service coupled with best prices available.
I'd imagine the quality of service, response times, etc would vary with whomever is providing the service in your locale.
Photos are great, post processing is amazing. Thanks for sharing.
Done deal. Please contact me at JimmydaCreek@gmail.com with particulars. I have an PayPal acct, probably the fastest way to get you your money.
Nice work raymondh, but maybe a little more emphasis on the cheekbones...
Your next door neighbor's back yard?
I used to shoot high school football games (on film) using a Nikon N-90, 400 speed Kodak film, a Nikon 70-200 f/2.8 with a Kenko 1.4x converter. This rig worked quite well even at the dimly lit stadiums of the smaller outlying schools. A 1.4/1.5x converter only costs you one stop of light as opposed to a 2 stop reduction for a 2x converter. For me it was the difference between being able to autofocus or not and of course, at a higher shutter speed.. This was one of the higher end multi-element converters as your borrowed Nikon is, not the cheapo 2 element $29.95 specials. Got some great actions shots, but they were generally printed as 4x6 for yearbook shots. I did produce a few 8x10's for sale which seemed adequate. Wish I had stuck with Nikon instead of switching to Canon.
Sorry for my part in the melee. Was just enthused (perhaps over enthused) by the oblique use of the word magazine. I'll try to be good from here on.
Lol, don't spend it all in one place, my dad used to say.
Try a polarizer. When properly adjusted, should eliminate reflections from anyting non-metallic.