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33 votes
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The history of SPAM
19 votes -
We found French underwear in an ancient Sumerian city | Girsu Project | Curator's Corner S10 Ep4
12 votes -
Why America built a forest from Canada to Texas
14 votes -
The deportation campaigns of the Great Depression
24 votes -
Lux Radio Theater - Tonight Or Never (1937)
2 votes -
Race against the regime: The 1936 Olympics, and the Nazi rise to power
7 votes -
Animation on the Alexeïeff-Parker pinscreen
6 votes -
The forgotten story of the largest stadium ever constructed
13 votes -
How World War II was 'practiced' in Spain (1936-1939)
7 votes -
The United States of pizza, mapsplained
17 votes -
Building the worst World War II air force - terrible aircraft and how to sell them (feat. @AnimarchyHistory)
17 votes -
Listen to Orson Welles' presentation of Charles Dicken's "A Christmas Carol"
8 votes -
Researchers have connected the identity of skeletal remains found in a well at Norway's Sverresborg castle to a passage in a centuries-old Norse text
18 votes -
Why did Norway try to take Greenland from Denmark in 1931?
3 votes -
Book borrowed from Finnish library returned eighty-four years late – copy of Arthur Conan Doyle's Refugees was due to be returned month after USSR invaded Finland
13 votes -
How the internet revived the world's first work of interactive fiction
13 votes -
Sounds Vintage Presents: Radio Fallout
6 votes -
Jack Conroy, proletarian author and editor, supported important 20th century US poets
4 votes -
What happened to the Nautilus?
9 votes -
Why a tire company gives out food’s most famous award
15 votes -
Architecture lovers can spend the night in a modernist masterpiece designed by Alvar Aalto – former TB sanatorium is now Finland's most unusual holiday let
10 votes -
On the history of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) and the rise of Walt Disney
15 votes -
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was Walt Disney’s biggest box office gamble
2 votes -
'Gone With the Wind': The explosive lost scenes. A never-revealed war over slavery's depiction. Rhett Butler's suicidal intentions. A rediscovered script reveals what didn't make final cut.
4 votes -
The sauce that survived Italy's war on pasta
6 votes -
How two Jewish kids in 1930s Cleveland altered the course of American pop culture (and the birth of Superman)
5 votes -
‘The Book of Disquiet’ is the weirdest autobiography ever
5 votes -
Drinking Harrods coffee from the 1930s
7 votes -
Book review of A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression
7 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 -
The real story behind Fanta's Nazi German origins
8 votes -
When Jimmy Stewart played the villain
4 votes -
WWII animated: Second Sino-Japanese War 1937-1941
4 votes -
Searching for Mr. X - For eight years, a man without a memory lived among strangers at a hospital in Mississippi. But was recovering his identity the happy ending he was looking for?
4 votes -
The real first 3D printed buildings (1930s)
3 votes -
What happened to the Antarctic Snow Cruiser?
4 votes -
Dame Vera Lynn, Ross Parker and Hughie Charles - We'll meet again (1939)
3 votes -
Why Adolf Hitler was obsessed with Iceland
5 votes -
Erich Weinert: Der Heimliche Aufmarsch (Cover by Hanns Eisler)
1 vote -
Did Austria want the Anschluss?
3 votes -
Al Bowlly - Heartaches (1931)
4 votes -
The Great Depression explained, globally
3 votes -
Helicron propeller driven car (1932)
3 votes -
What Jim Crow taught the Nazis: In the 1930s, the Nazi regime were fascinated by the global leader in codified race law — the United States
9 votes -
When fascism was American; Using religion, anticommunism and xenophobia, "Father" Charles Coughlin popularized fascism in 1930s America, not too unlike Donald Trump today
8 votes -
HBO Max temporarily removes Gone with the Wind because of ‘racist depictions’
9 votes -
Early warnings: How American journalists reported the rise of Adolf Hitler
5 votes -
Huey Long, the dictator of Louisiana
3 votes -
The lessons of the Great Depression
8 votes