Before and after utilizing a faux-infrared effect in Photoshop. Sculpture Garden, Skokie.
from my 2006 photo archive
Before and after utilizing a faux-infrared effect in Photoshop. Sculpture Garden, Skokie.
from my 2006 photo archive
can anyone smarter than me tell me why the “Email Page Location” is greyed out, and there is no keyboard shortcut to email a link to a webpage?
What is the keyboard shortcut supposed to be? Maybe some other app is using it already?
embiggen if you need to see it better:
decluttr
seems lame of Google to use a keyboard shortcut that is already taken, if that’s the reason
Stairs at Chicago’s City Hall. Naturally monochromatic.
from my 2006 photo archives
real title unknown. South Halsted.
another portion
www.flickr.com/photos/swanksalot/2064443360/
from my 2007 photo archives
balancing work and not-work
from the 2009 archives
Rain on Randolph
from my archives
no idea where this was: I was just a passenger, with a camera.
one of those shots I wish I could take over: because the car was moving, it is slightly fuzzy, softer than I wanted, and thus cannot really be printed very large.
I’ve been having entirely too much fun with the Hipstamatic iPhone application1. I’ve taken over two hundred snapshots in the first 48 hours2: a pace that probably won’t last, but for now, I’m enthusiastically exploring the capabilities of the camera.
Turns out there was an actual plastic 35 mm camera called the Hipstamatic, with an interesting back story. The inventors are unfortunately deceased3, but their older brother has created a blog to tell their story, and the story of the iPhone app.
Founders: Bruce and Winston Dorbowski
Founded: November 1982 (Unofficially, as in no lawyers)
Location: Merrill, Wisconsin, USAThe Idea: Bring people a camera that cost less than the film. Bruce had a Russian plastic camera that our father gave him as a Christmas gift in 1972. The camera had since broke and was no longer being made or sold, at least anywhere he could find it. So Bruce and Winston came up with a plan to recreate something similar. Winston had fallen in love with his Kodak Instamatic and that was the start of the Hipstamatic.
Camera Specs
Model: 100
Material: Plastic Body, Plastic Lens
Produced: 1982-84
Type: View finder camera
Lens: Hipsta A1
Film: 35mm
Picture Size: 28mm x 28mm
Original Cost: $8.25
Focus: Automatic
Aperture: 2.8
Flash: hot shoe[Click to continue reading The Great Hipstamatic 100]
I never owned my own Hipstamatic, but the iPhone app seems like a pretty good simulacrum, even going so far as to force you to use a tiny little viewfinder to frame your shot.
the camera takes a second to warm up (well, at least it pretends to be warming up the transistors), also ‘turning on the flash’ takes a few moments. Can’t take rapid-fire photos, in other words. I’ve missed a few shots because of this, but I suppose it’s part of the game, yo. And since there is no flash on an iPhone, I’m guessing turning on the flash just adds a bit of randomly controlled coloration to the image.
changing lens, film, flash is as easy as a swipe of the finger…
My other complaint about the application is that the cost doesn’t include some extras like this film, for instance. The application could have been priced a couple of dollars more and included. Not that big of a deal really, mostly annoyed me because my iPhone password is fairly robust and includes a lot of typing, numbers, capital letters, etc. I bet the $1.99 initial price spurs sales though.
Once your image has been “developed”, you can either email it, or upload it to Facebook. I’m happy with these options, as I usually upload iPhone snapshots to Flickr via the email-to-Twitter option. Alternatively, the image is saved in your iPhone photo library for you to sync to your computer or whatever else you normally would do. I chose to email via the Hipstamatic application interface as Hipstamatic then records what lens, film, flash is used4
I have bought a few other iPhone camera apps5, none have been nearly as much fun to use as The Great Hipstamatic.
Footnotes:Milwaukee Avenue
looks like a later tenant cut holes into the glass brick so as to get a little light (embiggen to see for yourself)
Shot with my Hipstamatic for iPhone
Lens: John S
Film: Kodot Verichrome
Flash: Off
there’s a new iPhone phone app called Hipstamatic that’s sweeping through the Flickr community. Sort of a quirky application, but fun nonetheless. I’ve already snapped dozens of shots in a few hours worth of use. Doesn’t seem like it saves high resolution versions though, which is a flaw, imho.
Another way to pretend our fancy smartphones are toy cameras or Holgas.
wandering around looking for a bottle of water, found the backside of this well-known doughnut cafe
Seattle, summer of 2007
North Branch of the Chicago River
from last Yom Kippur1, if I’m not mistaken. I smooth-talked us into celebrating in nature instead of wasting time in a shul2
Ooops, my mistake, taken on Rosh Hashanah3 instead.
Footnotes:the former Carson Pirie Scott building, now empty, though with big plans for the future.
(Embiggen)
has anything moved in yet?