But, he was only going to let you have what he was going to give you.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
mike wilson wrote:
From: frank theriault [EMAIL PROTECTED
and become
somewhat humble.
Are you familiar with the term invincible ignorance? That is how you are
coming across here. If that is not how you want to come across, maybe you
should
think about it a bit.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com
.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
P. J. Alling wrote:
Actually I was alluding to the point that bikes with full chain guards
were at least WWII vintage and therefore
of interesting photos on this site:
http://www.ski-epic.com/amsterdam_bicycles/
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
David J Brooks wrote:
Which brings up a nother point
I believe it affects the auto focusing, Frank. If the algorithm finds what it
thinks is a face it focuses on that. Just making cameras, for idiots, a little
smarter.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
wanted to go with RAID-5 it would be best to go with a pure hardware
solution, and they are expensive (at least by my standards).
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
the raid drivers, if you
MB is raid capable. Confusing, heh?
There is a way to modify windows for pure software raid;
http://www.tomshardware.com/2004/11/19/using_windowsxp_to_make_raid_5_happen/
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
Dunelt (about 20 years newer than the one I had as a kid and nowhere near
as well made) that I have to find an original 32 spoke front wheel for. I would
like to have a full Roadster too; something about a long tall bike.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http
Well, I have my hats. GRIN!
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
mike wilson wrote:
graywolf wrote:
I would
like to have a full Roadster too; something about
as I am poor and live somewhere
where you can not find most of the stuff I am looking for.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
Scott Loveless wrote:
I have
Ah, heck, Scott, the wheels are even already laced. This is the way they are
supposed to come (second picture):
http://www.yellowjersey.org/EASTMAN.HTML
GRIN
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
So, Peter, just what is your point? That you have been deprived? If that is so,
I can understand your resentment.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
P. J. Alling
imagine the automatic wheel building machine
would have had problems with them. I am also going to put alloy rims on the
3-speed, so another spoking job. Then there is the junk Raleigh I want to do
something with. I guess I will have enough to keep me busy for the winter.
Graywolf
Website: http
it...
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
David J Brooks wrote:
I think thats the Delorme product i am looking into.
The Michigan escort driver told me some one he knew
Well, I remember riding against the wind both ways once. 70 miles in a 35mph
headwind is kind of tiring, IIRC.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
Bob Blakely wrote
way is The only way, even when it
changes daily. Which is of course rather stupid, anyone who rants against human
nature is being stupid, even me.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
me one state at a
time) which I hang on a dash mount.
If you get a refurbished laptop, I suggest one of the corporate models. They
seem to be more reliable than the consumer versions, and they are pretty cheap
because usually they come off least in huge quantities.
Graywolf
Website: http
cheaper than Photoshop grin.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
David J Brooks wrote:
Hi Mat.
I looked into these systems a bit, but i understand, and i may be
wrong
apologize for the
heartless response you got.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
chuck wrote:
Really, I'd rather drop it off at a charity shop than go thru
From what I can see, the only real improvement in flatbed scanners in the last
few years has been in speed. The newer ones may have greater contrast range
too,
but even my ancient one does well enough scanning prints.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http
.
Regards,
Bob...
-
Note: No trees were killed in the sending of this message,
but a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The combination of old and high-quality will always
All photographs are ordinary. In the past 160 years everything has been done,
over, and over, and over again. So, they are all ordinary, but some are
interesting despite that.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
I guess my 2 MXen do not count as I still use them.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
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Radio Shack, I belive their contact cleaner is just the CRC stuff relabled.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
P. J. Alling wrote:
Anybody know what's in CRC
-competing purposes.
This is the way commercial work is usually quoted.
I would always give a firm quote if wanted, but it was actually an estimate of
the above plus 50%, in case I goofed.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
twice before doing it.
Nah! No one thinks twice...
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 12/10/2007 2:57:55 P.M. Pacific
Well yah, I gotta remember that while RS sold the same stuff for decades, now
its different every time you go into the store.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
(WAY too much magnification, no eye
relief), too small to handle nicely, low flash sync.
ME - Alright
I thought those two were identical except manual exposure on MX,
aperature priority auto on ME. What did you find so different?
--
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog
]
[Skipped]
Those great old film cameras will likely be totally forgotten by
2015, never mind 2037.
[Skipped]
--
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
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Well it is as much smaller as a Leica IIIC is smaller than a Leica IIIF, about
1/8 inch in length.
Cotty wrote:
On 09/12/07, P. J. Alling, discombobulated, unleashed:
The ME is much smaller than
the MX,
Poppycock.
--
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http
.
Phone booths are pretty much a thing of the past over on this side of the
Alantic. Sad, but then almost anyone can afford a prepaid cel-phone. Speaking
of
which, I have to remember to get a new card as my time is running out.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http
What does proprietary mean?
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Very good news. Who has a 14 megapixel APS CMOS sensor?
Paul
than a professional model to sign a
SMP long form model release, it is intimadating as hell.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
P. J. Alling wrote:
Maybe she thought
-- supposedly, the low voltage models have a red
dot inside the battery cover (note that it might have been changed at some time
in the past). 2-- Send the serial number to Vivitar and they will tell you
which
you have. 3-- Check it with a digital multimeter.
#3 says my 283 is an old one.
Graywolf
ever owned)
Mamiya Universal Press (Owned two over the years, they were money makers)
Pentax MX (cheating here because I got a couple of replacements)
B:
Leica M2
Arriflex R16B2 (Never had a need for one, but always wanted one anyway)
Full Frame DSLR
--
Graywolf
Website: http
the days, that thing
hung on the side of my Super Technica for several years.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
P. J. Alling wrote:
They still show film cameras
ppi for both.
But looking at it another way you can have bigger pixels, so at the same
resolution for both you can have 2+ times the sensitivity.
In either case the larger sensor is going to be about 4 times as expensive.
There are always trade offs involved.
Graywolf
Website: http
not making money with my cameras anymore either.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
P. J. Alling wrote:
Actually Kodak's sales literature, (propaganda), originally said
and money is not
worth it.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
---
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? That was back in the days
of 64mb memory modules. These days you can get a 4gb flash card about the size
of your thumbnail.
As I said, things change.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
Steve Desjardins wrote:
Funny. I remember about 6
Chuckle
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
David J Brooks wrote:
On Dec 1, 2007 1:24 PM, graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At least in the days of chemical prints you could move the image into the
proper light if you were
the personal
preferences problem, do you prefer a somewhat highkey or a somewhat lowkey
image. At least in the days of chemical prints you could move the image into
the
proper light if you were a perfectionist.
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal
for the future of
the human race.
I guess the ~bitch~ that tried to snuff me out the other day doesn't
share either of JFK's or HGW's enthusiasm for two-wheeled
human-powered transport...
cheers,
frank
--
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http
most to those records were propaganda rather than history. But I guess
that
almost all written history is propaganda when you think about it a bit. SIGH
cbwaters wrote:
the people who decided when it's what season were obviously on drugs.
--
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
=0.2.26.14.25lc=en
http://tinyurl.com/22aq9o
I don't use the slide films they're discontinuing, but the HIE kinda hurts.
--
Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
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Graywolf
Website: http://www.graywolfphoto.com
Blog:http://www.graywolfphoto.com/journal/
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to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow
the directions.
As in most posts criticizing someone's spelling, she simply misspelled it*. Try
cutesy.
*This seems to be a universal syndrome.
Antti-Pekka Virjonen wrote:
I like it except for club spelled klub. Too cutsey.
Marnie aka Doe :-)
Hi,
Sorry to ask, but what does that word cutsey mean? I
The combination.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 11/8/2007 10:03:13 A.M. Pacific Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
As in most posts criticizing someone's spelling, she simply misspelled it*.
Try
cutesy.
*This seems to be a universal syndrome.
===
The Lima built Allegheny (4-3-3-4, I think) was designed as a passenger
locomotive but were mostly used to haul coal. Strange, since creeping along at
those speeds they only produced about half the horsepower they were capable of.
They were one of the biggest most powerful steam locomotives
Actually it seems to have been a 2-6-6-6. So much for my memory, I photographed
the one at the Henry Ford Museum sever times.
Bill Owens wrote:
Should be 4-6-6-4.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
graywolf
Sent: Wednesday, November
Actually there are certain older pmcmia wifi cards that are popular with folks
who like to steal their internet access because they are very easy to
reprogram,
including the MAC Address.
I guess however that if I was using setup like we have been talking about, I
would only consider setting
The squirrelly one is nice. I presume that the distance between them is farther
than it looks, because squirrel is even tastier than pigeon. However, as they
say a bird in talon is better than a squirrel in the tree...
ann sanfedele wrote:
This didn't seem to get through to the list before
Those all sound like news to me. News is something different. What they show
they ought to call it Olds. And not for the 11 o'clock Olds. Same old, same
old. Good night. Or maybe they should call it the 11 o'clock Creepy Horror
Show.
For every bad person out there there are a hundred good
They used three cameras and an assistant to reload them, so they always had a
loaded camera in their hands. They also only took one shot of each person. The
prints were usually done at an over-night lab and mailed to the customer the
next day.
Most of the immediate print stuff, often call
And maybe you never have tried to make a living as an event photographer.
http://graywolfphoto.com/work.html
The Ren-Faire stuff was done develop and print 120 film, return the next
weekend
and try to sell prints. You are very lucky to sell 1/3 of the prints that way
where if you can deliver
Well, Tom, think of it this way; when we are beating up on him, we are giving
you a break. But, unlike you, he came off as wanting to know why some of us
thought such an accessory would be useful.
I also would like to point out that many people are replying to his posts
without having yet read
Most of those lackies don't even expect to be paid.
P. J. Alling wrote:
Seen it? Heck, I've done it. (Before I gave up the idea of ever
actually making a real living at photography, I dreamed of the day I
could afford my own lackey).
Bob Sullivan wrote:
Brendan,
Can you say
A good point, Mike, if it is ones own system one can restrict it so only that
card can connect. I personally would have no use for connecting a camera to a
Wi-Fi internet access point.
mike wilson wrote:
If it's assigning a MAC address to the card and then only allowing that MAC
address
GRIN! Yes, I would think there is a little more dust at a horse show than,
say, at a night club. Of course if you were in the big time you could put your
setup in an air conditioned trailer.
David J Brooks wrote:
On 11/1/07, John Sessoms [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: graywolf
Being able
Why not do the initial build at home then move the box to your parents?
Christian wrote:
A friend added to the paranoia the other day and suggested running
another rsync job to another Linux box at my parents' house for even
more redundancy. Not a bad idea... The initial sync would take
Oh, you want to learn how to be a hacker, heh? Setup your laptop with an access
point, look at what is trying to access it. The card in the guys camera will be
one of them. However, there are two points to think about here. 1. Is anyone
seriously going to bother. 2. Even if this particular card
I could think of several ways to set such a thing up. The first thing to look
at
is the trains routing. IT is possible that the route by car was much shorter
than the route the train took which would make your. If the distances were
great
a laptop with a Sat Phone could send the images back
Sheese Make that:
It is possible that the route by car was much shorter than the route the train
took which would make your scenario work easily.
graywolf wrote:
I could think of several ways to set such a thing up. The first thing to look
at
is the trains routing. IT is possible
Breaking my own rule about repeating myself, why would you be worried?
Who is going to all that effort to steal your snapshots? I should worry that
the
government is reading all my email because they can. I don't because I can not
see any reason they would want to. And if I was doing something
Yes, the event is going on. Dance, horse show, bicycle race, or whatever, they
are not going to wait for the photographer.
Stan Halpin wrote:
Event photography is like making love - position is important but
timing is everything.
stan
On Oct 31, 2007, at 2:25 PM, Brendan MacRae wrote:
If they took out war, politics, and sports there would not be much left would
there? Remove disasters and celebrities as well and there would be nothing
there
at all. And, folks wonder why I do not pay much attention to the news.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://news.aol.com/top-news-photos/
the network or receiving PC.
Tom C.
From: Brendan MacRae [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
Subject: Re: For those who miss CaNikon's Wifi capabilities
Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2007 12:28:21 -0700 (PDT)
--- graywolf
Well? Congradulations, Mark.
Mark Roberts wrote:
Mark Roberts wrote:
Cryptic subject line, eh?
Can't say more right now but I'll reveal the meaning shortly. :-)
Here's the deal:
I was convinced I was going to end up with one of the consolation
prizes, a microfiber lens cloth.
Not
I donno the current legal requirement, but since copyright now is until 75
years
after the photographers death, shouldn't you use the date you plan on dying.
GRIN!
It would take an essay to explain why, but I personally think copyrights and
patents ought to only be seven years these days.
--
Being able to transfer your images directly to the laptop your assistant is
using to print and sell the images without having to stop shooting is a money
making benefit for event photographers. If you are just taking photos for
yourself it is probably only good for bragging rights.
I think
Mine is basically two cards on one chip. You can set each channel independently
of the other. On the other hand there are only two channels, you can not set up
two monitors and a TV set on it although there are jacks for all three, just
any
two of them. I thought I would mention that because I
I tend to prefer directly adjusting the video card to using Adobe Gamma,
however
some video cards do not seem to have that capability. Most likely because the
driver is crippled.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 10/31/2007 7:22:44 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Just my way of letting Supermicro know I am upset with them.
--
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to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow
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or use
transmitted light, which makes the shadows/black suck!
Do I need to shoot this monitor! :-)
Walt
On 10/31/07, graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I tend to prefer directly adjusting the video card to using Adobe Gamma,
however
some video cards do not seem to have that capability. Most
This seems to be the cheapest one that has two DVI ports. The price has come
down in the past couple of months. I paid $80 with shipping.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814102064
BTW, that is a photo of an older model, the heatsink/fan is different on the
one
I bought.
The current high-end cards use so much power that they are all subject to
failure from heat. You also need a robust power supply to keep them happy. $250
puts you into the bottom of high-end gamer cards and the bottom of new
workstation cards. Strangely they are usually the same card, the gamer
That is usually a driver problem. Most video cards have a thousand or so
possible video combinations, but the driver may only support a few or them.
Downloading the latest drivers will usually give you support for the latest
monitors. That applies to current cards, they usually quit upgrading
I thought you did not have those kinds of problems with Apple computers...
SEG
David Mann wrote:
Hi all,
I'm unsubscribing for a little while so I can sort out my computer without my
email account filling up.
I was getting ready to install Leopard when the system decided to throw a
Well, I do not have problems with XP Pro, but I do keep my desktop clean and
don't let programs load a lot of self-starting garbage. I will however, admit
that most users do not seem to be able to maintain their system. I guess it is
a
trade off; load everything automatically so the user does
Drive Arrays
JBOD (Just a Bunch Of Drives). Drives used individually. For example you put OS
and Programs on one, you audio on another, and your photos on a third. Some
folks use this, mistakenly, for the next.
Concatenated Drives. Drives connected end to end. When drive one is full data
is
I have noticed that often the price from a vendor is cheaper from their website
than it is from their ebay listing. But the point of an auction is to drive up
the price, if the buyer does not know what something commonly sells for and
wants it badly enough he is likely to cheat himself. Then
Or maybe potential customers were reading your posts saying Pentax was going
down the drain and avoided buying their products.
Tom C wrote:
Paraphrased from a 10/29 Bloomberg article:
Pentax Corp., said first-half profit fell 45 percent, missing its own
estimate, after writing down the
Yes, the only thing dumber than users are the help desk people. Sorry, but I am
currently going round and round with the people at Supermicro. What is it about
DOA, they do not understand?
---
The replacement motherboard you sent me is DOA it does not power on, not even
the bare board.
As Dave mentioned the newest Linux version does 16 bit, but you will probably
have to wait a bit to get the windows version that does it. Probably a bit hard
to find the Linux version yet as well as it was just announced. Check on them
again in a couple of weeks to a month.
Brian Walters
Not real clear in the release notes:
http://www.gimp.org/release-notes/gimp-2.4.html
Of course if you are primarily interested in web images 16 bit (usually 10 or
12
bits per pixel + padding actually) does not make a lot of difference. The price
(free) is certainly right.
Scott Loveless
Been there, done that, and quit because of that all too many times in my life.
The problem is that to get the responsibility all you have to do is be a
responsible person. When your boss, and his boss, do not care you are in for an
emotionally debilitating time.
The worst of those for me was a
Just to give the other point of view, I hate split image focusing devices. To
me
they are annoying, right in the middle of the picture where I want to see what
I
am looking at, and they are not as accurate as you guys seem to think they are.
Plain ground glass with grid is my choice. It is
Use my Sunny 11 rule*, you get more correct exposures that way than if you use
f/16. The MX only uses the batteries for the meter, everything else is
mechanical (Unless you are talking about that tiny digital movie camera Bill
Owens likes so well).
* As I have said here in the past the Sunny
Use the L76BOP (CR 1/3 N) Lithium battery. They work fine. One replaces the two
S76. They are cheaper than the silver cells too. Also they have a long shelf
life, something that is important these days when we do not use our film
cameras
as extensively as we used to.
Thibouille wrote:
of SLR's sold with split prism
screens in the 60's, 70's, 80's all had them for no good reason.
Tom C.
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
Subject: Re: Katz Eye Split prism screen
Date: Wed, 24 Oct
of reality. it is the reality of a reflection.
-Jean Luc Godard
- Original Message -
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Just to give the other point of view, I hate split image focusing devices.
To me
they are annoying, right in the middle of the picture where I want to see
they are there... what does it hurt
graywolf? If one achieved focus in the first place, then moved off and back
on just to confirm, then it's just as likely they achieved critical focus
the second time as well.
Tom C.
From: Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss
No put down intended, Bill. I thought it was a neat camera when you showed it
to me.
Bill Owens wrote:
Graywolf mentioned my propensity for liking the Optio MX. First off, I've
never used it as a video camera, only for still images. Being somewhat
physically challenged, I find the movable
From context it is millions of people milling around in a low spot in the
ground.
Bob Blakely wrote:
What is an awful of people? Is that like a gaggle of geese?
Regards,
Bob...
Art is not a reflection of reality. it is the reality
Well, the B-25 only had 28 cylinders, while the Lancaster had 48. But it always
seemed that the radials sort of rumbled while the v-12's sort of snarled. The
one that always sent shivers up my spine was the Beech 18 (C-45) throttled back
with the 9 cyl PW R-985 engines slightly out of sync.
Ya, but you guys have to remember you are talking two different things; Weight,
and explosive power. Also payload includes crew, ammo, and fuel as well as the
bombs.
A 22,000# has the equivalent power of 22,000# of TNT it does not weigh 22,000#.
Just as a 5 megaton atomic bomb does not weight
curmudgeon, kind of silly sounding aren't they?
Whereas
young whippersnapper, or old curmudgeon, is just emphasis.
Thibouille wrote:
On 10/24/07, graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Use my Sunny 11 rule*, you get more correct exposures that way than if you
use
f/16. The MX only uses the batteries
Yah, and you are the one who tossed the roll of paper, so guess who gets the
flak? On the other hand the kid figures that if you fire him he can always go
work at Taco Bell or Big lots for the same money. This is the result of trickle
down economics. You see it real well here in Boone where if
Newsman retouches photo, story at 11:00.
I mean look at those hands...
They don't look real at all.
Cotty wrote:
On 22/10/07, David Savage, discombobulated, unleashed:
...or does this character resemble our very own listmeister?:
the standard size pieces of
glass that were available.
P. J. Alling wrote:
Heck, I've finally learned to compose for the 35mm frame, and unlike
some people I know the 6x9 format well predates the popularity of 35mm
double frame cameras.
John Sessoms wrote:
From: Toralf Lund
graywolf
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