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22 votes
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Stop hoping for an Instagram replacement, diversify instead
21 votes -
Webb: The world is about to be new again
24 votes -
First image from the James Webb Space Telescope
@NASA: It's here-the deepest, sharpest infrared view of the universe to date: Webb's First Deep Field.Previewed by @POTUS on July 11, it shows galaxies once invisible to us. The full set of @NASAWebb's first full-color images & data will be revealed July 12: https://t.co/63zxpNDi4I pic.twitter.com/zAr7YoFZ8C
36 votes -
They found two new craters on the moon and a new mystery - Searching through imagery from NASA, researchers found the discarded stage of a forgotten rocket crashed in March, but other questions remain
5 votes -
Prince Rupert's Drop exploding in epoxy resin at 456,522 fps
6 votes -
Why dark and light is complicated in photographs
5 votes -
Views of Iceland in February – Nacho Doce, a photographer with Reuters, spent the past few weeks traveling across the country
3 votes -
Shooting with a 1936's Zeiss Ikonta camera
Recently I got for free an old Zeiss Super Ikonta 531/2, it's a medium format foldable camera from 1936. It was in decent shape but the lens was very foggy. Fungi can grow on lenses but I think it...
Recently I got for free an old Zeiss Super Ikonta 531/2, it's a medium format foldable camera from 1936. It was in decent shape but the lens was very foggy. Fungi can grow on lenses but I think it was just general dirt. Opening it was a bit tricky (I had to get watching-making tools, because the screws are very tiny) but I managed to clean the lenses quite well. I shot a first roll but the focus was off, so I had to make sure the front lens element was at the right distance, using some semi-transparent tape on the back of the camera to see the image.
Then I shot a second roll and developed it myself, which was also a first (it's not super hard though), I had no idea if the images would come out good, or even at all (wasn't even sure I loaded the developing tank correctly). Seeing the images come out of the tank for the first time is quite magical, and they came out great (some of them at least...) :
Even with my crappy development & scanning I can get high-res images that compete with my expensive digital camera. The lens (Tessar 105mm, f3.8) is quite sharp wide open (statue shot) and I even took a long exposure shot at night using a release cable. The process is very slow and focusing is hard, but it's quite fun and rewarding. These kind of cameras are very cheap but the rest (film, accessories, development, repairs, ...) not so much.
5 votes -
What picture did Nasa take on my birthday? How to find your Hubble Telescope photo using the APOD calendar.
8 votes -
The first standard to assure a photo’s authenticity has been created
7 votes -
Beware the copyleft trolls
9 votes -
Bliss - The story of Windows XP’s famous default wallpaper
4 votes -
Native Americans: Portraits from a century ago
11 votes -
Weird testing infrastructure in pictures
@Kane: testing facility for thyssenkrupp elevators in Zhongshan City pic.twitter.com/2L4jG2Nel6
17 votes -
Researchers shrink camera to the size of a salt grain
6 votes -
Dr Ken Libbrecht is the world expert on snowflakes, designer of custom snowflakes, snowflake consultant for the movie Frozen - his photos appear on postage stamps all over the world
6 votes -
The sticky issue of consent in street photography
11 votes -
Witness History spoke to photographer Mark Edwards, who was given unique access to document a famously photo shy community of Christiania in Denmark
11 votes -
An uncomfortable monkey and some singing fish star in Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards 2021
8 votes -
Drawing with light: How photos were made a century ago
6 votes -
Texture Archaeology, Cobblestone, and the most overused texture from the 90s
5 votes -
The mystery of the "same sky" postcards
4 votes -
Documenting the last pay phones in America
12 votes -
Diorama Map - Sohei Nishino
4 votes -
Images from a changing Iceland – the landscape is undergoing constant change, and the rate of that change is being accelerated by global warming
9 votes -
1800s astronomical drawings vs. NASA images
13 votes -
Through the looking GLASS - Om Malik interview with the developers of GLASS, a subscription photo sharing app
3 votes -
From the 1910s to the 1930s, John Alinder portrayed the local people of rural Sweden, the landscape around them and their way of life
12 votes -
Photography of Lauren Tepfer
5 votes -
New Norwegian law will require advertisements where a body's shape, size, or skin has been retouched to be labeled
16 votes -
How does film actually work? (It's magic) [Photos and Development]
10 votes -
What Internet memes get wrong about Breezewood, Pennsylvania
6 votes -
Cambodia condemns Vice for edited photos of Khmer Rouge victims smiling
17 votes -
Picture Book Lust - Vanishing Asia by Kevin Kelly
5 votes -
Down By The River
10 votes -
Finally got my Zorki 4k shots developed
11 votes -
“Dig Us”: 60 Years of Louis Armstrong at the Sphinx
4 votes -
Self Portrait
14 votes -
Tools for colorizing old photos and enhancing old videos | No Sweat Tech
6 votes -
Understanding ProRAW: A journey into cameras, RAW, and a look at what makes ProRAW so special
12 votes -
The iPhone 12 Pro Max: Real pro photography
13 votes -
Best photo cards in 2020
5 votes -
Google Photos will no longer have unlimited free storage after June 1
40 votes -
Winners of the close-up photography contest
9 votes -
John Waters bequeaths his art collection to Baltimore Museum of Art, whose bathrooms will be named in his honor
13 votes -
Gone But Also Forgotten
11 votes -
Winners of 2020 Drone Photo Awards
12 votes -
Woman's photoshoot of her dogs goes hilariously wrong
8 votes -
Emily Ratajkowski - Owning my image
26 votes