a gem of a photo resource and more …

Lewis Hine – Exercises, Swimmers
c1918-35 courtesy GEM and Hyperallergic Newsletter

Toronto. Journal editor and friend Bob Lansdale sent me a brief email the other day with this link to a  Hyperallergic Newsletter article..

The article in the newsletter by Claire Voon is dated December 26, 2016 and announces that George Eastman Museum (once known as George Eastman House) in Rochester is digitizing its quarter million plus photographs and other objects from the photography, technology, and George Eastman legacy collections. The digitized images are online here.

Note that the online images are available as high resolution photographs plus the right to use them for research as a scholar, publisher, or arts professional by contacting the digital asset coordinator at George Eastman Museum.

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Leica, you say – LHSA

Viewfinder for March 1975

Toronto, In the early 1980s when I was treasurer and Ron Anger president of the national PHSC society, at an executive meeting held at the home of Ron and Ellen Anger, I was surprised to learn of the existence of a camera society devoted exclusively to Leica – the Leica Historical Society of America.

LHSA is one of our exchange organizations. The LHSA publishes a journal called the Viewfinder. Like many, it was a simple mimeographed newsletter growing to become today a much thicker high quality magazine. And the organization is now International in scope. Its web site is very professional and high quality, not unlike the cameras badged Leica.

 

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International Radio Corporation

Argus A series cameras

Toronto. In the 1930s, a small company in Ann Arbor, Michigan began manufacture of the latest, greatest thing – home radios. Their fresh egg was using Bakelite plastic for cabinets instead of expensive wood or metal cabinets. Their less expensive radio – the AC/DC mantle model Kadette radio took off.

Later in the 1930s the company began making cameras using their Bakelite expertise and the 35 mm cassette used by Kodak for its Kodachrome film.  The very popular Argus A was quickly followed by other models in the series, competing with the Kodak box cameras and folders of the day. They marketed a high end series best known for the Argus C3. The company changed its name to International Research Corporation, and later to Argus Camera (still existing today).

The 1939-41 Argus A2F model as advertised in LIFE in 1939 had a built-in extinction meter, and adjustable focus from infinity down to 15 inches, rather than the more common 3 feet. The shutter release was unique too. On the lens barrel, it could be rotated for right or left hand users! Thanks to George Dunbar for sourcing the old April 3, 1939 LIFE advertisement on page 82 of that issue (lots of pre WW2 coverage too).

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I’ll show you mine if …

Photographic Canadiana
March 1975 front cover

Toronto. By the time Photographic  Canadiana issue 1-2 was released around March of 1975, the society had sorted out membership to be National (journal only) and Toronto (meetings plus journal). We had two organizations as well, a National society and a Toronto branch. It was anticipated that other branches would be formed and join the National  society to obtain the journal, Photographic Canadiana, but that never happened.

One idea that did happen was the idea of an exchange membership with sister organizations using the journals or other documents in lieu of money. We send our journal, Photographic Canadiana to them, and they send theirs to us. Simple.  In the coming posts, I will highlight some of the exchange members we have today. And today’s Photographic Canadiana with original articles, photos, and much more Canadian content is a far cry from the mimeographed and crude printed versions of the early years.

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a colourful book

Spencer’s Colour Photography in Practice

Toronto. It was the 1970s and photography was growing in popularity with magazines, books, chemicals, printing paper, retailers, camera collecting societies, galleries, and studios popping up everywhere. In March of 1972, I stopped by the local Classics bookshop in Montreal and bought a copy of Colour  Photography in Practice. My book was a revised and reprinted edition of D. A. Spencer’s magnificent 1938 book published by Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons shortly after Kodachrome hit the retail shelves and revolutionized photography. The modern updates in it are by Messrs Mannheim and Hanworth while printing and publishing was by Focal Press of London and New York. The 409 plus pages are heavy with the written word alleviated by some black and white diagrams and the occasional colour insert – no photographs.

Spencer must have been a fan of Alice in Wonderland since his book offers many quotes from Reverend Dodson’s wonderful children’s story. In Spencer’s revised book on colour photography, the trio of authors begin at the very beginning with a couple of chapters on what colour is and how we see it.

The book offers a detailed view of the two main film-based processes (subtractive and additive) and how we used them back in the early 1970s. A worthy addition to the library of any photographic historian. Read from cover to cover, the book will give you a sound grounding in colour and colour photography.

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PHSC News for December

Massive Sigma Lens $$$

Toronto. You received Sonja’s latest beautiful opus yesterday if you are on our MailChimp list. If you aren’t yet on the list, just click here and send us an  email to add you!

The lead article Polarizing Photography features the 2018 Comedy Wildlife Photo Award. The next page features our coming event December 19th (I poached it for the Toronto meeting post). This is followed by a tasty photo from The Photographer’s Cookbook featured in PHOTO BOOK 101. Next is a poster for a Kodak exhibit at the  RIC (and our January 2019 outing).

The next page, Festive Frugality,  has some ideas suitable for this time of the year. The X(Mas) Files discusses a novel Finnish photographer and his subject in The Loneliness of the Long Distance Santa. It is followed by the ever popular column Web Links by Louise Freyburger featuring a trio of interesting hot links. The middle link is to Nikon’s Small World 2018 awards and features photos of some things I’ve only seen under a microscope.

The final columns are PHSC Talks, Dot Asks Vi (also a Christmas theme here), and on page 11, The Classifieds. Click the above SIGMA lens thumbnail or in the MENU on NEWSLETTER to see this issue.

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Dummies for Cameras

Retail Store Dummy Cameras

Toronto. The other day I had a chat with John Linsky who had discovered a forgotten dummy camera in his collection (more on that in a later post). John’s mention of dummies brought back a wealth of memories.

The late Bill Belier once mentioned that post war, good German cameras were both expensive and in short supply. One solution was for the companies to make and sell dummy cameras which were much cheaper and could serve to show the features to prospective buyers. Some times the camera or lens was cut in half with a fine jeweller’s saw to show the internal mechanism.

Over size mock ups as you see here served as advertising for the various models. In December 2006 at our annual show and tell meeting, Shelton Chen showed a couple of these outsized camera mock ups plus a bunch of models with clear transparent plastic bodies showing off the camera’s internal mechanics.

N.B. When I first created this web site about two decades ago, I bought and followed a book called HTML for Dummies …  HTML stands for Hyper-Text Markup Language, a subset of a markup language used by printing presses in those days.  HTML (and other software, plus your browser) gives the site page its “look” and allows hot links to other pages and web sites.

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Adam Cornick, Halifax Photographer

Peggy’s Cove
Adam Cornick

Toronto. Halifax photographer Adam Cornick has captured a number of iconic scenes in and around Halifax, Nova Scotia including this gorgeous image of Peggy’s Cove in winter. I saw Peggy’s Cove in person over 4 decades ago and it is indeed iconic. Don’t like the weather there? Wait  minute and it will change.

Adam Cornick  has his own shop and site called Acorn Art. He was recently written up in the Star Halifax, National Post, Halifax Today, etc. Take a look at these beautiful colour shots of East Coast scenes.

My thanks to George Dunbar for alerting me to this photographer.

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Annual Show and Tell meeting Dec 19, 2018

Its Show and Tell time!

Toronto.  As we roar on to Christmas and the holidays, its our annual Show and Tell session. The date is December 19th this year. Click on the poster at left for details. (Thanks to Sonja for this delightful bit of whimsy – coming shortly in the PHSC News newsletter for this month).

Bring you favourite collectible bit of photographica and tell us all about it! Camera, lens, photo, poster, etc., etc.

There is a gift exchange AND a silent auction too!

The public is always welcome. Go to our Programs page for times and directions.

.

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PhotoEd Winter 2018 Issue

Cover – PhotoEd Winter 2018

Toronto. If you like photography, you will be pleased to see that the latest issue, Winter 2018 (#54) is out. Editor Rita Godlevskis has released her latest full colour issue of this great Canadian Photography magazine.

Issue 54 features article like Margaret Mulligan’s In Studio How To; Brian Chaput on Eye Candy; Joshua Cameron’s shooting with flair article on David J. Fulde, plus many more articles and photo essays.

Visit the PhotoEd website to subscribe, or drop by your favourite newsstand before the copies are all sold.

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