An old movie trick I read about somewhere was to underexpose using a
polarizing filter and I think it was a red filter to simulate moonlight
on a bright sunny day. (This was of course using BW film).
David Savage wrote:
G'day All,
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
and the other actors could climb safely but have
the film look like night.
Bob
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of P. J. Alling
Sent: 25 February 2008 21:43
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: PESO: Lunch Break (QTVR Pano)
When
-
From: Bob W [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 26 February 2008 08:17
To: 'Pentax-Discuss Mail List'
Subject: RE: PESO: Lunch Break (QTVR Pano)
It was in the early-mid 1930s. Before she made Day of
Victory, Triumph of the Will etc. she made Alpine melodramas
such as The Blue Light
Dave, Averages out OK... Regards, BobS.
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 11:56 PM, David Mann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 25, 2008, at 9:21 PM, David Savage wrote:
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
Oh shut up: it reached 30 degrees C in my office today :(
I'd be tempted to go to WA
Brave man, a polarizer on a 360 pano! Looks good.
You Ozzies have all the beach weather this time of year...
6 to 9 inches of snow coming here.
Regards, Bob S.
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 2:21 AM, David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
G'day All,
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 12:01 AM, Bob Sullivan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Brave man, a polarizer on a 360 pano!
Or foolish?
A little from column A, a little from column B...
Looks good.
Thank you sir.
You Ozzies have all the beach weather this time of year...
Look at the map of Australia.
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 3:21 AM, David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
G'day All,
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/0038.mov
;-)
It's kinda funky what the polariser did. Almost looks like night time to me.
Cheers,
I'm not ignoring you,
- Original Message -
From: frank theriault
Subject: Re: PESO: Lunch Break (QTVR Pano)
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 3:21 AM, David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
G'day All,
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/0038.mov
;-)
It's kinda
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 11:18 AM, David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
G'day Frank.
You need Apple Quicktime installed to view it:
http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/
My computer at work is set up so that I can't download programmes from
the internet (can't download any .exe
I'm not a big pano person, but you do a good job with this.
Aside from the polarizer weirdness, of course.
G
On Feb 25, 2008, at 12:21 AM, David Savage wrote:
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/0038.mov
--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
PDML@pdml.net
On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 1:03 AM, frank theriault
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 3:21 AM, David Savage [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
G'day All,
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/0038.mov
;-)
It's kinda funky
David,
On Feb 25, 2008, at 12:21 AM, David Savage wrote:
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/0038.mov
Very nice mate - have a look at some of the panos on this page:
http://www.graysofwestminster.co.uk/tour/
at right. I stumbles across these and they aren't bad - you might find
them
Interesting factoid: Leni Riefenstahl invented day-for0night shooting.
An old movie trick I read about somewhere was to underexpose using a
polarizing filter and I think it was a red filter to simulate
moonlight
on a bright sunny day. (This was of course using BW film).
David Savage
When was that, just curious because I've seen some old B oaters, maybe
from the mid 1930s where they were obviously using that technique but
not getting the balance exactly right.
Bob W wrote:
Interesting factoid: Leni Riefenstahl invented day-for0night shooting.
An old movie trick I
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 3:38 PM, Bob W [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Interesting factoid: Leni Riefenstahl invented day-for0night shooting.
That ~is~ interesting. I've noticed in lots of old (and not so old)
BW movies it's quite obvious that what they're trying to pass off as
night is in fact
Thanks Godfrey.
Live learn. I'll know better next time.
Cheers,
Dave
On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 1:44 AM, Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm not a big pano person, but you do a good job with this.
Aside from the polarizer weirdness, of course.
G
On Feb 25, 2008, at 12:21 AM,
I've often wondered how they did that in old movies.
Now I know.
Cheers,
Dave
On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 5:38 AM, Bob W [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Interesting factoid: Leni Riefenstahl invented day-for0night shooting.
An old movie trick I read about somewhere was to underexpose using a
On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 3:42 AM, Cotty [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
David,
On Feb 25, 2008, at 12:21 AM, David Savage wrote:
http://www.arach.net.au/~savage/Misc/0038.mov
Very nice mate - have a look at some of the panos on this page:
http://www.graysofwestminster.co.uk/tour/
at
On Feb 25, 2008, at 9:21 PM, David Savage wrote:
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
Oh shut up: it reached 30 degrees C in my office today :(
I'd be tempted to go to WA sometime if it wasn't hours of flying over
ocean followed by hours of flying over desert...
- Dave
--
PDML
At 02:56 PM 26/02/2008, David Mann wrote:
On Feb 25, 2008, at 9:21 PM, David Savage wrote:
Hope this finds you warm dry. (~390kb):
Oh shut up: it reached 30 degrees C in my office today :(
So you'd be hot and wet then (!!!)
:-D
It's 36°C outside at the moment. Thankfully A/C
keeps it down
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