SEE BANFF!

Kinetoscope

What a clever idea. The viewing machine is a classic looking kinetoscope, the kind you find at Disney land, and the images are of current day Banff Canada rendered in beautiful stereo.

These views were filmed around Banff and rural Alberta in autumn 1993. They were recorded with two stop-frame 16mm film cameras mounted on a “super jogger” baby carriage. Stereoscopic recording was either triggered by an intervalometer (for timelapse) or by an encoder on one of the carriage wheels (for dollys and moviemaps). Since the filming was “stop-frame” (rather than “real-time”), time and space appear compressed.

SEE BANFF!
photography, stereo, Canada, cool

MAKE Link-a-Palooza!

Whee! Lazy link day. I should just cut and paste the entire MAKE site it’s just that good!
I’m still waiting for my copy to come in the mail. I saw it at Borders today and I’d a little worried that it might have become ‘lost’ somewhere. Anyone else having this problem?

FRRRRAAAAPPPP!

Ah, the good old Marx generator. These things are fun to build, just don’t let them bite you! Same can ge said about leyden jars I might add…

MAKE: Blog: Build your own Marx Generator

Junk

Too cool!

MAKE: Blog: Surplus Store List

Build Music

Music projects are always fun to build. I wonder if I could attach one of these to my cell phone…

MAKE: Blog: Tonepad – DIY Music Projects

Photo Lab

I did the same thing for a bit less I think. B&W film is fun to develope at home, nowdays you just scan them and you don’t have to mess with an enlarger. I just wish I had a scanner with less scratched glass and some anti Newton ring surface to it so I could get sharper images.

MAKE: Blog: Make a Photo Lab For $49.38

MAKE, DIY, mod, hack, projects

40th Anniversary of Super 8 film

Kodachrome 64

Wheee! Bake a cake, have a party!
Gizmodo has a little blurb about Kodak’s 50th anniversery of Super 8 motion picture film and the phasing out their line of Kodachrome 40 Super 8 stock due to marketplace dynamics. Kodachrome was great stuff, I loved shooting on the 64 ASA stock in my 35mm stereo camera, the colors were so strong and saturated. But, as I found out a few months ago, it’s very hard to find a lab that will process it.
So, Kodak will no longer be offering the vivid chrome in the Super 8 size and processing for the Super 8 stock will be halted in one year, the 16mm size will not be dropped at this time. However all is not lost…

The new KODAK EKTACHROME 64T film expands the current Super 8 portfolio that includes two black-and-white reversal films in medium and high speeds covering a range of lighting situations. Super 8 customers will also find the latest KODAK VISION2 motion picture films available in 200T and 500T speeds, incorporating the highest quality images, improved sharpness and grain, along with a full systems approach, optimizing the entire imaging chain.
“With Super 8 gates now available for high-end scanners, coupled with the KODAK VISION2 film technology advancements, Super 8 is what 16 mm film used to be,” says Mayson. “Super 8 color negative film has become another option for professionals with low budgets.”
As part of the portfolio revamp, Kodak will discontinue sales of its S8 KODACHROME 40 Movie Film. Final sales of KODACHROME Super 8 will be based on product availability over the coming months. Sales of KODACHROME 16 mm films will continue, unaffected by this announcement.

I have long thought of buying some short ends of Vision2 motion picture film for use in my still cameras, the latatude and grain of the Vision2 stock would be a joy to work with. I’ll have to look up the prices of stock and lab fees from Super 8 Sound and get my super 8 camera out and have a bit of fun.
KODAK:40th Anniversary of Super 8 film

film, Kodak, Super 8, motion picture, photography

360 Video

wrapedunwraped

I used to have somthing I called an ‘Orb Cam’ on my site. It was a large chromed plastic sphere that had a camera pointed at it. I didn’t have any software to flatten out the image so it was pretty much a poor man’s wide angle lens.
This is too darn cool! (Thank you MAKE for posting this)I’ve seen similar ideas done for robotic vision and 360 pamoramic images but the software has always been out of reach because I don’t program. I have to get a better Mac so I can run realtime effects…

Video Thing: My ghetto 360? video experiment

video, VR, MAKE, cool,

How to Make Holograms at Home

Holokit

I saw this in MAKE today, I have for years wanted to create my own holograms but every time I started getting into it I was always stopped by the film needed. I ran out of steam when I got to the point that I have to shell out the bucks for glass plates (Its been a while since I have tried it, maybe you can use cheaper film nowadays…)
Now I see this kit. It’s $139US and will make a transmission hologram in room light (!!!) using a red pen variety diode laser. Wow…. No lab required? I want to know how light fast the images are. This is freaking amazing!
The inventor says he is working on another version that is faster and won’t need a laser.

How to make holograms at home

If you can’t live without one, you can get one here at Liti Holo
laser, holography, photography, cool