About Isabelle Lousberg's "The Széchenyi Baths " series. These pictures are not pinhole photographs (unlike Castles or Sunflowers). In her introduction in French, Isabelle is just a little more precise about the technique that in her English text ; she explains :
" Interesting subject for pinhole photography that I chose to cover using an "almost normal" camera because of technical and time reasons. Human being until then absent in the pictures (because of pinhole technique) now appears floating between two waters...." Very nice pictures even if not pinhole ones ! I really do not think of any digital manipulation as I can feel Isabelle's sensitivity and way of working through her statements . Cheers from France Jean ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jeff Dilcher" <[email protected]> To: <pinhole-discussion@p at ???????> Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 1:57 PM Subject: RE: [pinhole-discussion] A website pinhole discovery > Some of these pictures were definately > very short exposure times. For instance, > the bath pictures, the water's action > is stopped. Anyone know how they did it? > I thougth that perhaps the pinhole camera > had a shutter on it, and extremely fast > film was used. But, the pictures almost > don't seem grainy enough for that to be > possible... > > _______________________________________________ > Pinhole-Discussion mailing list > Pinhole-Discussion@p at ??????? > unsubscribe or change your account at > http://www.p at ???????/discussion/ >
