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Blow Up $10.25 This 1966 masterpiece by Michelangelo Antonioni (The Passenger) is set in the heady atmosphere of Swinging London, and stars David Hemmings as an unsmiling fashion photographer hooked on ephemeral meaning attached to anything: art, sex, work, relationships, drugs, events. When a real mystery falls into his lap, he probes the evidence for some reliable truth, but finds it hard to reckon with. Vanes… |
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Understanding the Nikon Speedlight: SB-900, SB-800, SB-600 $11.68 Understanding the Nikon Flash SB800 and SB600 – A thorough overview of the the Nikon flash system featuring these two excellent flash units. Covers details on all functions and how to use them. Owners of Nikon flashes are often bewildered about how to use the flash unit effectively to produce the type of shots they want. Although the supplied manual does provide some technical assistance, flashes… |
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Rick Sammon’s DVD Guide to Using the Canon EOS Rebel XSi/450D $10.20 In this more than 1-hour long DVD featuring the Digital Rebel XSi/450D, Rick Sammon will show viewers all of the basic steps to taking great images. From camera basics to exposure, lenses, sport shooting, photographing in low light, close-up photography, people and portraits, animals and pets, Rick breaks down complex topics into fun and interesting lessons. While other videos in this market feat… |
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Epson Perfection V330 Photo Scanner (B11B200211) $90.00 Scan 35mm slides negatives and film strips with ease using built-in Transparency Unit to scan up to six negative frames or four slides at one time. Easily scan oversized prints documents and artwork. Restore color to faded photos with one click using Epson® Easy Photo Fix. Delivers sharp clear scans even if text is on colored paper or a double-sided document. Scan Size (W x H): 8 1/2″ x 11 7/10″ … |
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Epson Perfection V700 Photo Scanner (B11B178011) $619.00 Get professional quality results from virtually any photographic original with the Epson Perfection V700 Photo Scanner. With groundbreaking 6400 dpi resolution, this powerful scanner consistently delivers precision color and detail, whether scanning slides, negatives or medium format film. With a 4.0 Dmax, it offers exceptional image quality, excellent detail in shadow areas and remarkable tonal … |
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Kodak P570 Personal Photo Scanner $53.95 The Kodak P570 Personal Photo Scanner makes it easy to share digital copies of your favorite prints – from wallet size to 5 X 7 in. As a standalone scanner or connected to your PC, the P570 saves high-resolution digital copies of all your favorite pictures to the included 2GB MICROSD Card for effortless sharing. Designed for portability, ease of use, and high quality results, the P570 Personal Pho… |
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Epson Ultra Premium Photo Paper LUSTER (8.5×11 Inches, 50 Sheets) (S041405) $25.11 Epson’s Ultra Premium Photo Paper Luster is a high gamut ink jet paper, supporting vivid color reproduction capability and deep, rich blacks that rival traditional silver-halide prints. A popular photo paper with wedding and portrait photographers, The Ultra Premium Luster has a unique satin finish with a refined luster texture making it a perfect choice for both color and black-and-white ink je… |
Celebrity and Commercial Photographer, Christopher Barr: How’d They Do That?
D Camera Photographs
Canon Digital Camera Repair
Canon Digital Camera Repair Software
Digital SLR camera image restoration tool recovers corrupted video audio files, photos, snaps.
Wednesday, Oct 28, 2009
Digital camera data recovery tool retrieve accidentally deleted photos, images, audio, video files from digicam storage media. File rescue utility recover erased or lost digital pictures, images from media cards used by digital camera. Digital camera image revival program is the best recovery solution for Photo recovery, video recovery, Picture recovery, Image recovery, Picture restore with easy to use graphical user interface allows you to view the recovered photo snaps from your corrupted media before actual recovery. Camcorder photo revival tool is useful in retrieving accidentally deleted photographs, images, audio, video files and folder.
Handycam image rescue software supports recovery of all major picture file format including bmp, gif, jpeg, tiff etc of Canon, Kodak, Nikon, Panasonic, Sony, Jet flash, SiPix, Samsung and other major digital camera brands. Digital camera photograph revival application retrieves pictures lost due to accidental deletion, battery failure, transfer of photos from one device to another. Picture restoration utility scans complete device and restore all recovered photos in same format without any change in color, size and pixels.
Digital Camera Data recovery software
Software supports raw images recovery from Digital Camera of various brands with extension like Sony(.arw,. srf, .sr2), Casio(.bay), Adobe(.dng), canon(.crw,.cr2), Phase one(.cap,.tif,.iiq,.eip), Imacon(.fff), Nikon(.nef,. nrw), Kodak(.dcs,.dcr,.drf,.k25,.kdc,.tif), Epson(.erf), Mamiya(.mef), Olympus(.orf), Logitech(.pxn), Fuji(.raf), Panasonic(.raw,.rw2). Digital camera picture recovery utility is reliable for restoration of any type of digital files and folders including .avi, .bmp, .mpeg, .wav, .midi or any other file type stored in your digital media. Digital media image rescue software support recovery on Windows XP, VISTA, 2003, 2000 and 98 operating systems.
For all commercial enquiries please contact:
Data recovery shareware (Customer Representative)
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Website: http://www.datarecoveryshareware.org
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About the Author
Digital camera photos recovery tool is useful in retrieving accidentally deleted photographs, video files. Easily retrieve images from all type of digital camera including Digital Video cameras, Point and shoot cameras, Novelty cameras and many more.
Photograph Negatives Explained
The concept of photo negatives can be confusing. You see them in film developing centers, cameras, and photo envelopes, but you may not understand them. So what exactly are photographic negatives and why are they used? Hopefully this article will shed some light on the subject, so to speak.
A photo negative image is an exact copy of a normal image, but the colors and tones are reversed. I’m sure you’ve seen the reddish film strips that come with developed photos in envelopes. Those are negatives. If you want more copies of your photos you take them from the negatives. Look at them and you’ll notice that the bright and dark tones are reversed and the colors are opposite as well. What should be blue is yellow, what should be purple is green, and so on (based on the Red Green Blue color model).
Negative images are created by the film’s chemical reaction to light. The unexposed chemicals wash away and the negatives become opaque, or seen through. To make a copy of a photograph from a negative, another negative is made off of that, actually creating a positive. This might remind you of algebra, where two negative numbers multiplied by each other become a positive. This is considered the two step process in photography. There are other processes such as positive, or slide, but the negative is the most common chemical based process.
The most common color negative film is called C-41. The negative is made up of different colored emulsions layered onto an acetate or polyester base. Each layer is sensitive to certain colors and underneath each layer are collodial silver or dye filters. When exposed each filter removes light and exposes the layer beneath it. When developed, the dye couplers inside of each emulsion layer produce the colors.
So why still use photo negatives when we now have scanners? Convenience and quality. Typically when you scan an image you’ll lose detail, whereas with the negatives, you have entire original albums intact in a small envelope. If you have photograph negatives lying around that you’d like prints of, your best bet is taking them to a photo lab. You can scan negatives yourself though if you own a properly equipped digital camera or photo scanner. Most regular flatbed scanners won’t do this, but with a fluorescent lamp and a high resolution scan you can manage it. Of course with the popularity of digital cameras photograph negatives are needed less and less. But it’s still good to understand the basics of photo negatives.
About the Author
J.F. Borno enjoys writing about photography, specifically early American tintypes and Civil War photographs.