So- is generally conversational in this format
The guys that want to see more pictures of naked people then complain about tattoos and piercings
47th street for equipment. Gene Hacker in Hackensack, NJ for supplies, and another photo store in Teaneck nj (Teaneck Camera?) for other supplies (paper, chemicals)
47th street for equipment. Gene Hacker in Hackensack, NJ for supplies, and another photo store in Teaneck nj (Teaneck Camera?) for other supplies (paper, chemicals)
Mine needs new batteries, but best flash I ever used. On ‘auto’ it was spot on exposures most of the time
Hi, what town and what facility is that. My company used to do consulting work for NYCDEP, we did projects at most of their facilities and at suburban treatment plants also. Your photo brings back good memories
Could you tell me about the strobes. Batteries still good? Never wetinside?
In the old days we dry mounted photos using a new electric iron with a teflon heating surface at the lowest temperature that would bind the photo with mounting board
It was flip wilson- “the devil made me do it”
I do it the old fashion way with Nikonos 5 with 35mm or 80mm lense. Just takes a couple days to get film processed.
My local store is Bergen Camera in Westwood, NJ. Great sales help, very knowledgeable. The have classes, field trips and assignments when you can have your pictures critiqued. They match prices when they can.
• If you are just 'archiving" (small "a") for your own use, not for future external use or future family generations, I suppose "good enough" is, well, almost good enough.
I think that's where I am right now. These pix will be looked at as often as the family looks through the other dozens of albums of family snapshots.
Good chance to edit down- with some perspective, some pictures can be tossed. Bad ones were originally tossed, now mediocre ones don't need to be saved for posterity!
I had 25 years of family photos on my office walls- about 11 bulletin boards with mostly 4x6 prints- when they moved to a new building I didn't have the wall space anymore. Now the prints are going into photo albums.