Re: D FA* 85mm f/1.4

2020-05-27 Thread Paul Stenquist
Yup. Looks like a keeper.

Paul

> On May 27, 2020, at 9:56 PM, Bill  wrote:
> 
> I know we don’t talk much about Pentax camera equipment on the PDML, but
> for anyone interested, they are releasing a new and very desirable lens in
> the very near future.
> 
> 
> http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/lens/k/telephoto/hdpentax-dfa-85/
> 
> http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/star_lens/special/sp_dfa85-14/
> 
> 
> bill
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Re: D FA* 85mm f/1.4

2020-05-27 Thread John Francis
On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 07:55:32PM -0600, Bill wrote:
> I know we don???t talk much about Pentax camera equipment on the PDML, but
> for anyone interested, they are releasing a new and very desirable lens in
> the very near future.
> 
> 
> http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/lens/k/telephoto/hdpentax-dfa-85/
> 
> http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/star_lens/special/sp_dfa85-14/

Fortunately for my wallet, I don't have a single body I could use it on!
(the newest I have is a K-5, and that doesn't support the new lens mount).

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Re: D FA* 85mm f/1.4

2020-05-27 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
desirable indeed, but no way can I justify the investment,

Dan Matyola
*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
*



On Wed, May 27, 2020 at 9:56 PM Bill  wrote:

> I know we don’t talk much about Pentax camera equipment on the PDML, but
> for anyone interested, they are releasing a new and very desirable lens in
> the very near future.
>
>
>
> http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/lens/k/telephoto/hdpentax-dfa-85/
>
>
> http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/star_lens/special/sp_dfa85-14/
>
>
> bill
> --
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> follow the directions.
>
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D FA* 85mm f/1.4

2020-05-27 Thread Bill
I know we don’t talk much about Pentax camera equipment on the PDML, but
for anyone interested, they are releasing a new and very desirable lens in
the very near future.


http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/lens/k/telephoto/hdpentax-dfa-85/

http://www.ricoh-imaging.co.jp/english/products/star_lens/special/sp_dfa85-14/


bill
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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Jeffery Johnson | Photo Captures by Jeffery

I wonder if one can dry it in rice but not sure that it works.

On 5/27/2020 7:11 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:

And BTW, does anybody need a freshly washed FA PZ 28-105? Maybe a few M series 
Leica lenses?

Sent from my iPad



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RE: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread jcoyle
That 28-105 was one of my favourite lens, until I dropped it in China!


John in Brisbane



-Original Message-
From: PDML  On Behalf Of Stan Halpin
Sent: Thursday, 28 May 2020 10:11 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List 
Subject: Re: A River Runs Through 

And BTW, does anybody need a freshly washed FA PZ 28-105? Maybe a few M series 
Leica lenses?

Sent from my iPad

> On May 27, 2020, at 8:08 PM, Stan Halpin  wrote:
> 
> Thanks all got your supportive And helpful comments. 
> A bit of the back story and a brief update.
>We live on a river, the Chippewa about .5 miles downriver from the 
> confluence with the Pine River, about two miles upriver from the confluence 
> with the Tittibawasee which then joins the Saginaw river and flows into 
> Saginaw Bay which is an appendage of Lake Huron. Between them, the Pine, 
> Chippewa, and Tittibawasee drain a very large watershed. Basically flat 
> country, meandering rivers. We look south over a large bend in the Chippewa, 
> and about a mile to our north the Tittibawasee roughly parallels the Chippewa 
> the two getting closer and eventually merging at downtown Midland.
>10-12 days ago ( I am loosing track!) a low pressure system parked over 
> the region and dumped many inches of rain. The hydro section of our National 
> Weather Service predicted a rise of the Tittibawasee up to X feet at their 
> river gauge. From past experience I knew that X height would mean 
> approximately 26-28 inches of water in our garage, but said garage is 30” 
> below the level of our single level home, so no big deal. We moved the car 
> etc from the garage to higher levels according to a long developed and tested 
> plan.
>Then Tuesday a week ago came the big oopsie. The Tittibawasee has several 
> small dams not too far upriver from town. They hold back enough water to 
> create recreational lakes but also allow the owner to generate/sell hydro 
> power. One failed, (predictably given the owners record), the next one 
> downstream was failing, the predicted crest was now about five feet higher. 
> Of the roughly 40,000 persons in our town, 10,000 (including us) were issued 
> immediate evacuation notices. We grabbed a few things and headed for higher 
> ground 20 miles west. Not too long after that the East-west road behind us 
> closer to town was closed due to water over the road. Two days later we came 
> back to our home. The good news was that the second dam partially held, 
> enough to slow the flow somewhat, and the eventual crest was only a bit over 
> the historic high, which for us meant only 27 3/8 inches of water in the 
> house. “ONLY” that much as worst case would have been another 2 feet higher, 
> or more.
> 
> Enough for today, I’ll continue with update tomorrow... Slowly recovering, it 
> will be weeks or months.
> 
> Stan
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
>> On May 27, 2020, at 10:49 AM, Paul Sorenson  wrote:
>> 
>> So sorry to hear this, Stan.  Hopefully your insurance will come through 
>> and soon life can return to some normalcy.
>> 
>> With regard to your photos/images in whatever form you can recover them - 
>> over the years I've lost possession of a multitude of images.  The flowers, 
>> landscapes, etc all invoke memories of good times but they are all pretty 
>> esoteric and can be replaced with other pretty pictures.  Those I regret 
>> losing the most, and would be the first to be saved during a culling, are 
>> the people pictures - the ones that would show future generations who we 
>> were and how we lived.
>> 
>> -p
>> 
 On 5/26/2020 9:33 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:
>>> As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
>>> inches inside.
>>> So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
>>> still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
>>> [Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my 
>>> five backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll 
>>> find their fate sometime but not now.]
>>> 
>>> So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I 
>>> mention that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved 
>>> negatives and contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why 
>>> keep those? Will you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me 
>>> to print a few flower macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I 
>>> suppose I could go back to using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg 
>>> says: “That would make more sense than trying to recover those thousands of 
>>> negatives just to find and produce 5 prints.”
>>> I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital 
>>> archives are also toast.
>>> 
>>> Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will 
>>> spend 3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. 
>>> Another 2 weeks after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhil

Re: PESO:

2020-05-27 Thread Ken Waller



Looks like you captured a very nice flower, but you need a tad more DOF to get 
all the petals in focus. The top most petals are slightly blurry or maybe they 
moved in a breeze. I like the composition with maybe a little less blank space 
on the RH side.


-Original Message-
>From: "Daniel J. Matyola" 
>Sent: May 27, 2020 4:04 PM
>To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List 
>Subject: PESO:
>
>Kousa Dogwoods bloom much later than the standard dogwood trees.  While my
>other dogwoods flower first, and then develop leaves, the Kousa gets its
>leaves first, and then the blossoms appear.  While this makes them less
>dramatic than the early spring dogwoods, they are very welcome as they are
>in bloom after the other dogwoods have dropped all their blossoms.
>
>http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/kouswa
>
>K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
>Comments, suggestions and criticisms are invited and appreciated.
>
>Dan Matyola
>*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
>*

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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Stan Halpin
And BTW, does anybody need a freshly washed FA PZ 28-105? Maybe a few M series 
Leica lenses?

Sent from my iPad

> On May 27, 2020, at 8:08 PM, Stan Halpin  wrote:
> 
> Thanks all got your supportive And helpful comments. 
> A bit of the back story and a brief update.
>We live on a river, the Chippewa about .5 miles downriver from the 
> confluence with the Pine River, about two miles upriver from the confluence 
> with the Tittibawasee which then joins the Saginaw river and flows into 
> Saginaw Bay which is an appendage of Lake Huron. Between them, the Pine, 
> Chippewa, and Tittibawasee drain a very large watershed. Basically flat 
> country, meandering rivers. We look south over a large bend in the Chippewa, 
> and about a mile to our north the Tittibawasee roughly parallels the Chippewa 
> the two getting closer and eventually merging at downtown Midland.
>10-12 days ago ( I am loosing track!) a low pressure system parked over 
> the region and dumped many inches of rain. The hydro section of our National 
> Weather Service predicted a rise of the Tittibawasee up to X feet at their 
> river gauge. From past experience I knew that X height would mean 
> approximately 26-28 inches of water in our garage, but said garage is 30” 
> below the level of our single level home, so no big deal. We moved the car 
> etc from the garage to higher levels according to a long developed and tested 
> plan.
>Then Tuesday a week ago came the big oopsie. The Tittibawasee has several 
> small dams not too far upriver from town. They hold back enough water to 
> create recreational lakes but also allow the owner to generate/sell hydro 
> power. One failed, (predictably given the owners record), the next one 
> downstream was failing, the predicted crest was now about five feet higher. 
> Of the roughly 40,000 persons in our town, 10,000 (including us) were issued 
> immediate evacuation notices. We grabbed a few things and headed for higher 
> ground 20 miles west. Not too long after that the East-west road behind us 
> closer to town was closed due to water over the road. Two days later we came 
> back to our home. The good news was that the second dam partially held, 
> enough to slow the flow somewhat, and the eventual crest was only a bit over 
> the historic high, which for us meant only 27 3/8 inches of water in the 
> house. “ONLY” that much as worst case would have been another 2 feet higher, 
> or more.
> 
> Enough for today, I’ll continue with update tomorrow... Slowly recovering, it 
> will be weeks or months.
> 
> Stan
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
>> On May 27, 2020, at 10:49 AM, Paul Sorenson  wrote:
>> 
>> So sorry to hear this, Stan.  Hopefully your insurance will come through 
>> and soon life can return to some normalcy.
>> 
>> With regard to your photos/images in whatever form you can recover them - 
>> over the years I've lost possession of a multitude of images.  The flowers, 
>> landscapes, etc all invoke memories of good times but they are all pretty 
>> esoteric and can be replaced with other pretty pictures.  Those I regret 
>> losing the most, and would be the first to be saved during a culling, are 
>> the people pictures - the ones that would show future generations who we 
>> were and how we lived.
>> 
>> -p
>> 
 On 5/26/2020 9:33 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:
>>> As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
>>> inches inside.
>>> So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
>>> still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
>>> [Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my 
>>> five backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll 
>>> find their fate sometime but not now.]
>>> 
>>> So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I 
>>> mention that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved 
>>> negatives and contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why 
>>> keep those? Will you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me 
>>> to print a few flower macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I 
>>> suppose I could go back to using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg 
>>> says: “That would make more sense than trying to recover those thousands of 
>>> negatives just to find and produce 5 prints.”
>>> I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital 
>>> archives are also toast.
>>> 
>>> Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will 
>>> spend 3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. 
>>> Another 2 weeks after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll 
>>> be looking for new stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, 
>>> washer and dryer, bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that 
>>> our insurance coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us 
>>> and I

Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Stan Halpin
Thanks all got your supportive And helpful comments. 
A bit of the back story and a brief update.
We live on a river, the Chippewa about .5 miles downriver from the 
confluence with the Pine River, about two miles upriver from the confluence 
with the Tittibawasee which then joins the Saginaw river and flows into Saginaw 
Bay which is an appendage of Lake Huron. Between them, the Pine, Chippewa, and 
Tittibawasee drain a very large watershed. Basically flat country, meandering 
rivers. We look south over a large bend in the Chippewa, and about a mile to 
our north the Tittibawasee roughly parallels the Chippewa the two getting 
closer and eventually merging at downtown Midland.   
10-12 days ago ( I am loosing track!) a low pressure system parked over 
the region and dumped many inches of rain. The hydro section of our National 
Weather Service predicted a rise of the Tittibawasee up to X feet at their 
river gauge. From past experience I knew that X height would mean approximately 
26-28 inches of water in our garage, but said garage is 30” below the level of 
our single level home, so no big deal. We moved the car etc from the garage to 
higher levels according to a long developed and tested plan.
Then Tuesday a week ago came the big oopsie. The Tittibawasee has 
several small dams not too far upriver from town. They hold back enough water 
to create recreational lakes but also allow the owner to generate/sell hydro 
power. One failed, (predictably given the owners record), the next one 
downstream was failing, the predicted crest was now about five feet higher. Of 
the roughly 40,000 persons in our town, 10,000 (including us) were issued 
immediate evacuation notices. We grabbed a few things and headed for higher 
ground 20 miles west. Not too long after that the East-west road behind us 
closer to town was closed due to water over the road. Two days later we came 
back to our home. The good news was that the second dam partially held, enough 
to slow the flow somewhat, and the eventual crest was only a bit over the 
historic high, which for us meant only 27 3/8 inches of water in the house. 
“ONLY” that much as worst case would have been another 2 feet higher, or more.

Enough for today, I’ll continue with update tomorrow... Slowly recovering, it 
will be weeks or months.

Stan

Sent from my iPad

> On May 27, 2020, at 10:49 AM, Paul Sorenson  wrote:
> 
> So sorry to hear this, Stan.  Hopefully your insurance will come through and 
> soon life can return to some normalcy.
> 
> With regard to your photos/images in whatever form you can recover them - 
> over the years I've lost possession of a multitude of images.  The flowers, 
> landscapes, etc all invoke memories of good times but they are all pretty 
> esoteric and can be replaced with other pretty pictures.  Those I regret 
> losing the most, and would be the first to be saved during a culling, are the 
> people pictures - the ones that would show future generations who we were and 
> how we lived.
> 
> -p
> 
>> On 5/26/2020 9:33 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:
>> As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
>> inches inside.
>> So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
>> still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
>> [Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my 
>> five backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll 
>> find their fate sometime but not now.]
>> 
>> So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
>> that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
>> contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? 
>> Will you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a 
>> few flower macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I 
>> could go back to using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: 
>> “That would make more sense than trying to recover those thousands of 
>> negatives just to find and produce 5 prints.”
>> I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital 
>> archives are also toast.
>> 
>> Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
>> 3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 
>> weeks after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking 
>> for new stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and 
>> dryer, bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our 
>> insurance coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and 
>> I can revisit that thought about a 645Z...
>> Thought for the day: avoid floods.
>> 
>> Stan
>> 
>> Sent from my
>> 
>> 
>> 
> -- 
> Paul Sorenson
> Studio1941
> 
> Sooner or later "different" scares people.
> 
> 
> -- 
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
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> http://pdml

Re: PESO:

2020-05-27 Thread ann sanfedele
P.s. (I commented earlier that i liked it)  Like aspect ratio, don't 
feel the slightly soft focus on tips of bloom matter at all..  
definitely consider that "empty space" not to be empty at all.. Nice 
geometry for me.


ann

On 5/27/2020 5:55 PM, l...@red4est.com wrote:

Very nice.  I might crop that 4x5 ratio to get rid of a lot of the empty space.

On my screen it looks like detail is lost in the highlights.

What might be fun is a very tight crop on the center of the flower, and that 
would also get rid of a lot of the blown highlights and out of focus.

On May 27, 2020 1:33:31 PM PDT, Ken Waller  wrote:


Looks like you captured a very nice flower, but you need a tad more DOF
to get all the petals in focus. The top most petals are slightly blurry
or maybe they moved in a breeze. I like the composition with maybe a
little less blank space on the RH side.


-Original Message-

From: "Daniel J. Matyola" 
Sent: May 27, 2020 4:04 PM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List 
Subject: PESO:

Kousa Dogwoods bloom much later than the standard dogwood trees.

While my

other dogwoods flower first, and then develop leaves, the Kousa gets

its

leaves first, and then the blossoms appear.  While this makes them

less

dramatic than the early spring dogwoods, they are very welcome as they

are

in bloom after the other dogwoods have dropped all their blossoms.

http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/kouswa

K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
Comments, suggestions and criticisms are invited and appreciated.

Dan Matyola
*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
*

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Re: PESO:

2020-05-27 Thread ann sanfedele

I agree.. I like the subdued light especially

ann

On 5/27/2020 4:11 PM, Paul Stenquist wrote:

Very nice. Elegant.

Paul


On May 27, 2020, at 4:05 PM, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:

Kousa Dogwoods bloom much later than the standard dogwood trees.  While my
other dogwoods flower first, and then develop leaves, the Kousa gets its
leaves first, and then the blossoms appear.  While this makes them less
dramatic than the early spring dogwoods, they are very welcome as they are
in bloom after the other dogwoods have dropped all their blossoms.

http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/kouswa

K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
Comments, suggestions and criticisms are invited and appreciated.

Dan Matyola
*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
*
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Re: PESO:

2020-05-27 Thread lrc
Very nice.  I might crop that 4x5 ratio to get rid of a lot of the empty space.

On my screen it looks like detail is lost in the highlights.

What might be fun is a very tight crop on the center of the flower, and that 
would also get rid of a lot of the blown highlights and out of focus.

On May 27, 2020 1:33:31 PM PDT, Ken Waller  wrote:
>
>
>Looks like you captured a very nice flower, but you need a tad more DOF
>to get all the petals in focus. The top most petals are slightly blurry
>or maybe they moved in a breeze. I like the composition with maybe a
>little less blank space on the RH side.
>
>
>-Original Message-
>>From: "Daniel J. Matyola" 
>>Sent: May 27, 2020 4:04 PM
>>To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List 
>>Subject: PESO:
>>
>>Kousa Dogwoods bloom much later than the standard dogwood trees. 
>While my
>>other dogwoods flower first, and then develop leaves, the Kousa gets
>its
>>leaves first, and then the blossoms appear.  While this makes them
>less
>>dramatic than the early spring dogwoods, they are very welcome as they
>are
>>in bloom after the other dogwoods have dropped all their blossoms.
>>
>>http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/kouswa
>>
>>K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
>>Comments, suggestions and criticisms are invited and appreciated.
>>
>>Dan Matyola
>>*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
>>*
>
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Re: PESO:

2020-05-27 Thread Paul Stenquist
Very nice. Elegant.

Paul

> On May 27, 2020, at 4:05 PM, Daniel J. Matyola  wrote:
> 
> Kousa Dogwoods bloom much later than the standard dogwood trees.  While my
> other dogwoods flower first, and then develop leaves, the Kousa gets its
> leaves first, and then the blossoms appear.  While this makes them less
> dramatic than the early spring dogwoods, they are very welcome as they are
> in bloom after the other dogwoods have dropped all their blossoms.
> 
> http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/kouswa
> 
> K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
> Comments, suggestions and criticisms are invited and appreciated.
> 
> Dan Matyola
> *https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
> *
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PESO:

2020-05-27 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
Kousa Dogwoods bloom much later than the standard dogwood trees.  While my
other dogwoods flower first, and then develop leaves, the Kousa gets its
leaves first, and then the blossoms appear.  While this makes them less
dramatic than the early spring dogwoods, they are very welcome as they are
in bloom after the other dogwoods have dropped all their blossoms.

http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/kouswa

K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
Comments, suggestions and criticisms are invited and appreciated.

Dan Matyola
*https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
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PESO: Rhododendron Bush

2020-05-27 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
This is the last of my Rhododendron bushes to come into bloom:

http://dan-matyola.squarespace.com/danmatyolas-pesos/2020/5/27/rhody-bush

K-5 IIs, FA 100 mm Macro F 2.8
Comments and criticisms are invited and appreciated.

Dan Matyola
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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Paul Sorenson
So sorry to hear this, Stan.  Hopefully your insurance will come through 
and soon life can return to some normalcy.


With regard to your photos/images in whatever form you can recover them 
- over the years I've lost possession of a multitude of images.  The 
flowers, landscapes, etc all invoke memories of good times but they are 
all pretty esoteric and can be replaced with other pretty pictures.  
Those I regret losing the most, and would be the first to be saved 
during a culling, are the people pictures - the ones that would show 
future generations who we were and how we lived.


-p

On 5/26/2020 9:33 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:

As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
inches inside.
So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
[Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my five 
backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll find their 
fate sometime but not now.]

So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? Will 
you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few flower 
macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could go back to 
using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would make more 
sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to find and 
produce 5 prints.”
I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital archives 
are also toast.

Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 weeks 
after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking for new 
stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and dryer, 
bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our insurance 
coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I can revisit 
that thought about a 645Z...
Thought for the day: avoid floods.

Stan

Sent from my




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Studio1941

Sooner or later "different" scares people.


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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Jeffery Johnson | Photo Captures by Jeffery
So sorry to read about what you all are having to go through. People 
keep telling me to look on the bright side but that is always easier 
said than done. The only bright side I see with y'alls situation is you 
will be starting now with new everything. I do hope you will be able to 
recover your photographic memories.


On 5/26/2020 9:33 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:

As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
inches inside.
So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
[Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my five 
backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll find their 
fate sometime but not now.]

So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? Will 
you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few flower 
macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could go back to 
using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would make more 
sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to find and 
produce 5 prints.”
I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital archives 
are also toast.

Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 weeks 
after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking for new 
stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and dryer, 
bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our insurance 
coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I can revisit 
that thought about a 645Z...
Thought for the day: avoid floods.

Stan

Sent from my




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https://www.PhotoCapturesbyJeffery.com
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Transportation - Pets - Nature - Scenic - Cityscape. Adorn home, office and business with 
high-quality canvas wraps, metals, photographic art, and framed/unframed prints.



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OT spencerscamera, Alpine, Utah

2020-05-27 Thread mike wilson
Anyone know this outfit?  Someone I know sent their camera to be modified for 
Astro and has heard nothing since it was picked up.
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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread ann sanfedele
Being one of those who knew a little sooner and not being sure how much 
you were wanting to spill (no pun) just jumping in here to send you more 
virtual hugs and hope the most precious of those older images can be 
retrieved.  I'm still regretting certain photos, letters even some 
clothing that someone had
sensibly (or not) suggested I dispose of and I bent.. as far back as 
1958. If they can be put aside for a calmer time without deteriorating 
farther.. but then I'm just a sentimental old broad.


Can't imagine how much work is ahead of you.. I'd be crumbling. but glad 
you are safe and still have your home still standing.


xo,
ann

On 5/26/2020 10:33 PM, Stan Halpin wrote:

As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
inches inside.
So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
[Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my five 
backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll find their 
fate sometime but not now.]

So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? Will 
you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few flower 
macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could go back to 
using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would make more 
sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to find and 
produce 5 prints.”
I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital archives 
are also toast.

Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 weeks 
after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking for new 
stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and dryer, 
bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our insurance 
coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I can revisit 
that thought about a 645Z...
Thought for the day: avoid floods.

Stan

Sent from my





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https://www.cafepress.com/annsanstuff
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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread mike wilson

> On 27 May 2020 at 03:33 Stan Halpin  wrote:
> 
> 
> As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
> inches inside.
> So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
> still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
> [Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my 
> five backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll 
> find their fate sometime but not now.]
> 
> So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
> that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
> contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? 
> Will you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few 
> flower macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could 
> go back to using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would 
> make more sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to 
> find and produce 5 prints.”
> I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital 
> archives are also toast.
> 
> Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
> 3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 
> weeks after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking 
> for new stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and 
> dryer, bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our 
> insurance coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I 
> can revisit that thought about a 645Z...
> Thought for the day: avoid floods.

Second only to fire for devastation.  I recommend dehumidifiers rather than 
fans.  Keep the doors and windows closed and try to find ones that self-empty.  
They will be quicker and more effective.

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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Henk Terhell
Stan, sorry to hear about your troubles with the flood. Good luck with 
all the cleaning.

Your thought of the day of avoiding floods is not an easy message.
It is however a useful warning to look into my own storage of pictures, 
though I keep a part of it in the cloud.


Henk

Op 2020-05-27 om 04:33 schreef Stan Halpin:

As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
inches inside.
So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
[Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my five 
backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll find their 
fate sometime but not now.]

So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? Will 
you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few flower 
macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could go back to 
using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would make more 
sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to find and 
produce 5 prints.”
I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital archives 
are also toast.

Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 weeks 
after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking for new 
stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and dryer, 
bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our insurance 
coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I can revisit 
that thought about a 645Z...
Thought for the day: avoid floods.

Stan

Sent from my






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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Ralf R Radermacher

Am 27.05.20 um 04:33 schrieb Stan Halpin:

As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
inches inside.


Yikes! Sorry to hear about this.

I second Mike's suggestion with the dehumidifiers. Then again, if
they're professionals they'll know what to do.

Watch out for mold. I've had to throw away furniture that came from my
parents' garden house which used to be flooded at least once every year,
even though the furniture had been taken out before the floods and then
brought back in. It was so smelly it cut my breath. Then again, I suffer
from various allergies, mostly dust and mold.

Ralf

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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Bob Pdml
That’s really terrible, Stan - where did the flood come from? I hope you can 
restore everything as best possible, quickly. Meg sounds very wise.

> On 27 May 2020, at 03:34, Stan Halpin  wrote:
> 
> As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
> inches inside.
> So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
> still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
> [Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my 
> five backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll 
> find their fate sometime but not now.]
> 
> So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
> that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
> contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? 
> Will you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few 
> flower macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could 
> go back to using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would 
> make more sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to 
> find and produce 5 prints.”
> I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital 
> archives are also toast.
> 
> Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
> 3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 
> weeks after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking 
> for new stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and 
> dryer, bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our 
> insurance coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I 
> can revisit that thought about a 645Z...
> Thought for the day: avoid floods.
> 
> Stan
> 
> Sent from my 
> 
> 
> 
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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Ken Waller
Sorry to hear of your flooding Stan.

A few years back, I went through approximately 20K slides dating back 40+ years 
of shooting and wound up with about a thousand I deemed worth keeping.
Glad I did that.


-Original Message-
>From: Stan Halpin 
>Sent: May 26, 2020 10:33 PM
>Subject: A River Runs Through 
>
>As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
>inches inside.
>So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
>still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
>[Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my five 
>backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll find 
>their fate sometime but not now.]
>
>So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
>that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
>contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? Will 
>you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few 
>flower macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could go 
>back to using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would 
>make more sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to 
>find and produce 5 prints.”
>I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital archives 
>are also toast.
>
>Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
>3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 
>weeks after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking 
>for new stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and 
>dryer, bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our insurance 
>coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I can 
>revisit that thought about a 645Z...
>Thought for the day: avoid floods.
>
>Stan
>
>Sent from my 


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Re: A River Runs Through

2020-05-27 Thread Alan C

That's terrible, Stan. Hope you manage to sort out most of it.

Alan C

On 27-May-20 04:33 AM, Stan Halpin wrote:

As some of you know, our home was flooded last week, high water at 27 3/8 
inches inside.
So we have been hauling stuff out, a lot to the curb for trash pickup, much 
still to be sorted, decisions about what to try to preserve/restore...
[Side note. Most of my camera gear was high and dry, my computer also, my five 
backup external drive all had water inside which I poured out. We’ll find their 
fate sometime but not now.]

So, sitting tonight going over tomorrow’s schedule and priorities. I mention 
that I want to tackle the 15-20 binders that hold my sleeved negatives and 
contact prints and selected proof prints. Meg says: “why? Why keep those? Will 
you ever use them?” Hmm, well Meg, you have been after me to print a few flower 
macros and most of my favorites were with the 645. I suppose I could go back to 
using a 645Z and go off looking for flowers. Meg says: “That would make more 
sense than trying to recover those thousands of negatives just to find and 
produce 5 prints.”
I think she has a point. Particularly if it turns out that my digital archives 
are also toast.

Starting next  Monday a professional cleaning crew of 5-6 persons will spend 
3-4 days mitigating the flood damage, sanitizing, and cleaning. Another 2 weeks 
after that of high powered fans for drying. Meanwhile we’ll be looking for new 
stove, refrigerator, furnace/boiler, hot water heaters, washer and dryer, 
bedroom furniture, living room furniture... Assuming that our insurance 
coverage comes through, by July this will mostly be behind us and I can revisit 
that thought about a 645Z...
Thought for the day: avoid floods.

Stan

Sent from my






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