Lawsuit over Monkey Selfie settled

Selfie taken by a Macaque Monkey for photographer David Slater back in 2011

Toronto. Do you remember reading my post back in July about the Monkey Selfie? On Wednesday the internet was awash with notes that the famous Monkey Selfie ownership lawsuit had been settled out of court. I was alerted to this in Wednesday’s Globe.

My favourite paper reprinted the Sudhin Thanawala article from the Associated Press complete with a copy of one of the original photographs in the dispute.

The out of court settlement assigns 25% of future earning from the photos t0 a charity aiding the monkeys and the balance to the British photographer, David Slater. I have attached a copy of the article in case the link disappears.

Thanks to George Dunbar for clarifying the details – the lawsuit was abandoned, not settled. The out of court arrangement is between the photographer and PETA.

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An old adage proven

A camera in hand is the best camera…

Toronto.. As the saying goes, “The best camera is the one in your hand…” For the first 70 or so years of photography the most important accessory was a good tripod! The sensitive media were so slow it was impossible to take a sharp hand-held image. Maddox’s dry plate technology and the later roll films helped of course. Maddox’s medium was fast enough to usher in instantaneous pictures. But no matter how good your camera was, it was utterly useless sitting on the shelf.

This hit home to me this past Monday when I woke to the bang and crash of the end of my driveway being torn up. Some weeks earlier I acknowledged to a city inspector that their contractor’s small back hoe’s blade had indeed put the three yard-long gouges in the bottom of my drive while it dug down to my water inlet valve. A skilled team descended on my now naked drive to add a few inches of gravel and ready it for asphalt.

Thinking I should record this event, I rushed outside. As I watched the team in action, I realized two things: first, my camera was indoors, and second, I had my iPod Touch in my pocket. I pulled it out and proceeded to take a dozen and a half shots over the next hour. My Sony would have taken sharper photos but it was in the house and in use it would have been obvious to all.

This example image was originally 2592×1936 pixels or about 5 Mp and reduced to 1296×968 pixels or about 1.3 Mp. It was shot with what would be a 35mm lens on a 35mm camera but was actually a 3.3mm lens. In the bright sunlight of the day, the tiny camera set itself to ISO 25, f/2.4 and 1/905 seconds speed. No wonder cameras are being seriously challenged now that every smartphone can take photos and easily upload them to the internet.

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PHSC Image Show Downtown November 26, 2017

Click for Vendor Table Form

Toronto. Did you enjoy our last show at the A&L Club at 14 Elm Street? Our next one is this coming November. Free Admission. Open Noon to 4 pm.

Our Image Show Chairman Ashley Cook says, “The leaves are turning red and the pumpkin spice lattes are on every corner, which means it’s also getting closer to the Image Show!

“Mark your calendars for Sunday, November the 26th and join us at the Arts & Letters Club in downtown Toronto.

“Interested in becoming a vendor for the show? We have a limited number of tables available, and they go fast! You can find an application form by clicking the icon above left, or click here. For more information get in touch with me (Ashley Cook) at fair@phsc.ca.

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PHSC Toronto Program Sept 2017 – April 2018

View of ROM from Bloor St with an iPod Touch during a visit to the Family Camera exhibition

Toronto. Departing Programme Co-ordinator Les Jones arranged the various presentations for the balance of this year and the first two months of the next membership year (2018/9).

Please note that some of the presentations are tentative and all are subject to change. We welcome both members and public to join us each month as we offer a mix of old and new photographic ideas and concepts – with free coffee and treats!

Go to our Programs page for times and directions.

Changes in the program will be posted here on our web site and in the PHSC News which is a free pdf format newsletter we send out each month just before an event or presentation. You  can sign up at news@phsc.ca to have your copy sent directly to your inbox!

Program Sept 2017 – June 2018

 

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PHSC Estate Auction Nov 19, 2017

Fall Estate Auction
hosted by the PHSC

Toronto. Our annual fall auction will be an estate auction. While all people are welcome, we cannot accept any more lots. We do have many interesting and exciting pieces for the collector and film using affection-ado. Included are Leicas, Hasselblads, Canons, Nikons, Manfrotto Tripods, Studio Gear, Lighting, Flash,and much much more. Here is a short PDF list of items – some in the slide show below and some not…

<<Click the icon to see the details – time, place, etc. We did a few posts on some of the cameras, lenses and darkroom gear (A drum you can’t beat, …beginning to see the light, Black is Beautiful, More Fish than Fowl – Leica IIIg, Seven come Eleven…, Some Canons shoot pictures).

There is a slide show of many of the lots (click Continue reading below). Additional photos of lots will be posted to the slide show as they become available. Note that four batches of photos have been uploaded to date, the last thirty or so this evening, November 9th.  And just added November 16th, some Nikon rangefinder cameras, lenses and filters!

Ashley Cook, our Image Show organizer noted that there are a few road closures Sunday, especially downtown. Check out blogTO for details.
Continue reading

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PHSC Fall Fair October 15, 2017

PHSC FALL FAIR Click to see details

Toronto. Our PHSC Fall Fair “The Big One” will be held next month on October 15th at Trident Hall in the west end of Toronto.

Lots of parking. Admission $7 – **Students free**

<< Click on the bookmark icon at left for details.

Members will receive the bookmark in our Photographic Canadiana  journal 43-2 which was mailed Friday, September 8th to domestic addresses.

International mailings will follow shortly.

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incident light readings

The Famous Norwood Director meter from an ad in the April 1948 issue of Popular Photography

Toronto. I wrap up this series of posts on hand held meters with the famous Norwood Director imported in the States by American Bolex (and later Director Products). Thanks again to George Dunbar for this April 1948 ad from Popular Photography. George mentioned that this was his choice of meter for industrial photography assignments with IBM Canada.

Most meters of the era measured reflected light. The trouble was a light subject tended to be under exposed while a dark subject was over exposed. Reflected light meters had white three dimensional attachments like Weston’s Invercone to read incident light (the light falling on the subject, not reflected by the subject). The Norwood Director was different –  it was designed to be an incident light meter!  The meter recorded the light falling on the subject and matched the same reading as that reflected from a neutral grey subject.

Using an incident light meter gave a more accurate reading for the contrasty colour films of the day. For black and white, the resulting negatives resulted in decent prints. Changing the paper number or development time let you adjust the final result for contrast and tonality.

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an essential tool in the mid last century

Weston Master II Light Meter

Toronto. Continuing yesterday’s theme on hand held exposure meters  (thanks George), this advertisement from Popular Photography’s April 1948 issue shows the famous Weston Master II meter. I bought in less than a decade later with the Master III. Both the II and III had dual scales and used a bakelite disk to switch from bright light to dimmer light.

The meters of that era used light sensitive selenium cells which generated a current when exposed to light – no battery required. Earlier Weston meters used a similar dial. The Master II and later Master III showed minor refinements to the dial. By the time the III was released the famous Weston dial read in ASA numbers, not Weston numbers.

The meter gave excellent results in daylight but sensitivity all but disappeared indoors or at night when a means to determine the correct exposure is most important.

The days of hand held meters were coming to an end. Briefly coupled on-camera meters became common place, then meters were built into cameras. Today, the concept of a separately adjusted meter is obsolete. Cameras and smart phones automatically adjust for the amount of light, shifting speed, aperture, and ISO value. And today’s ISO values were unheard of just a few decades ago, as was optical stabilizing circuitry.

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In the days of hand held meters

LIFE November 18, 1946 advertisement for a GE Exposure Meter.

Toronto. My thanks to George Dunbar for this gentle reminder of days long ago. In mid-November 1946 General Electric advertised its DW-58 hand held exposure meter  answer to Weston in LIFE magazine. You can watch a video of a slightly newer (1949) GE meter here.

The speed of black & white film and the slow shift to colour films necessitated  an accurate means to verify exposure. Films of the day demanded daylight for decent exposures. Night or indoors, photographers had to revert to flood lights or flash bulbs. Professionals already knew and could gauge the best exposure – or bracket any critical shot. Flash was common as a fill-in light or as a means to get a shot – any shot – in dim light.

When I first bought an exposure meter just over a decade later in the late 1950s, I opted for the Weston meter (meters that attached to the accessory shoe and linked to the speed dial were also popular). It was considered the standard while GE was considered an upstart. Those who had no meter could resort to the table that accompanied every roll of film, or use a tried and true rule of thumb.

Amateurs like me were delighted that some shots “came out”. Kodak helped us with its Verichrome black and white film. Verichrome  used two emulsions, a slow one and a fast one layered on a single transparent backing. This technique had the advantage of extending the dynamic range so a slightly under or over exposed shot would still print correctly.

For decades now cameras (and the ubiquitous smart phone) have had built-in exposure meters, initially as separate internal gadgets and later as an automated complement to the camera. Today, like films, glass plate negatives, and flash bulbs, separate hand held exposure meters have been relegated to history.

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… and now for something entirely different

Ted Talk videos on YouTube

Toronto. Last Saturday I received an email from my good friend John Linsky, our Financial Controller and co-founder of the PHSC. John suggested I watch some videos from recent TED Talks. I watched a few and would heartily recommend the talks to one and all!

Joh says, “Today I got an email from Marc Livingston, the fellow who donated the glass slide collection to PHSC. He sent one Ted Talks Time Lapse Photography presentations – amazing. Here are a few of the Ted Talks presentations on YouTube.com.

“This is addictive! I watched one, then another and another and there’s more. They are an interesting way of viewing what is on the earth, but unusual to see with the Time Lapse photography. Great stuff. ”

Following are three more links John provided. Take a look!

https://www.youtube.com/embed/FiZqn6fV-4Y

https://www.youtube.com/watch?annotation_id=annotation_2963966295&feature=iv&src_vid=FiZqn6fV-4Y&v=IDkSDPgrtjs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?annotation_id=annotation_3179683611&feature=iv&src_vid=FiZqn6fV-4Y&v=gXDMoiEkyuQ

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