Capture: Walk across the rooftops.
79 Responses
First ←Older Page 1 2 3 4 Newer→ Last
-
Hebe, in reply to
Mine have a lot of large earth-moving machinery parked next to the Mark 1 Zephyr.
-
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Umm, yeah. They’re his photos. ;-)
Great to hear that Murray's pix may get on line, I know he's been scanning furiously over the past few years (on Bryan Staff's scanner) and it would be excellent to see images from both of them get to a wider audience.
If Murray doesn't start his own site, a coupla guest blogs here would be a fabulous start to long overdue exposure... -
Seems to me that what we can do here that’s a bit special is have conversations about stuff using pictures. We already have FB for recent family-and-friends pictures, and there are plenty of places out there that have contests of photographic skill…but here we have a community that loves to share enthusiasms and anecdotes, and now we can do that with words and pictures, how awesome is that?!
And Ian and Carol’s collaboration…that sort of clever playfulness is a key part of PAS.
Just my 2c.
-
Sacha, in reply to
closely followed by lots of helicopters
and pelicans
<shudder> -
Up on the roof...
Drifters aside, I'm thinking the Blue Nile could provide many more Capture blog headings, I can think of several that would be perfect for a Murray Cammick Gallery...
Headlights on the Parade
Automobile noise
Saturday Night
Soul Boy
;- ) -
I forget which one of my camera manuals cautions that the user should be careful to keep a firm grip of lenses when changing them as if dropped they could break, and the broken glass could be hazardous. Srsly!
I'm not normally one to bitch about the silly warnings that come with products these days.
But I purchased a bottle of dog shampoo several years ago for my smelly mutts, and prominently on the back it claims "NOT TESTED ON ANIMALS". Which is of course a lie, it's just tested post-consumer purchase.
-
Russell Brown, in reply to
and now we can do that with words and pictures, how awesome is that?!
Way awesome.
-
JacksonP, in reply to
Blue Nile could provide many more Capture blog headings
All I can say to all those who have come early to Capture, please stay late.
-
Hebe, in reply to
All I can say to all those who have come early to Capture, please stay late.
Capture is firming up to be one of those I-really-shouldn't-but-I-can't-resist pleasures. It combines many of my quiet obsessions.
-
slarty, in reply to
I recall swimming somewhere on the North Shore and getting pink toilet paper (remember that?) in my fingers... ahh the good 'ol days when nobody drank to excess, there was no crime and our environment was truly clean and green.
-
slarty, in reply to
Sofie, would that be the Amerigo Vespucci? Can't see well enough to count the masts!
-
It occurs to me that at some point inviting everyone to delve into their parents' photo albums and scan and post some here would be fun and rewarding
Here's one frame digitally 'captured' from an 8mm movie shot by my Dad, before a family wedding in 1956. He was standing on the corner of Symonds St and Alex Evans St. Kodachrome colour is pretty resilient.
-
Looking down Symonds St from the same spot. Rangitoto just visible above the trees. This stretch of road is where the motorway overbridge is now. There is an archway visible that must have been another entrance to Grafton cemetery. I had prevously noticed this now vanished archway in Gary Baigent's 1967 book of Auckland photographs The Unseen City.
-
JacksonP, in reply to
-
Bart Janssen, in reply to
parents’ photo albums
My father took great photos but most of them were at the nudist club ...
-
JacksonP, in reply to
Apropos of anything you care to choose, I understand this feature is also available on ‘other’ PA blogs. ;-)
-
Damian Christie, in reply to
Screw yer photos, Blue Nile? I think I just found some musicks I haven't heard before and very much like. Thanks.
Awesome work on the photo blog btw. As someone who has struggled over the years uploading lots of pics to PA using awkward html that never quite works properly the first time and the links are always broken and uploaded photos don't appear and the perspective gets stretched because it has to be a certain width and I can't do the required maths in my head... it's nice that it's so much easier these days.
-
Russell Brown, in reply to
it's nice that it's so much easier these days
Yes, the new photoblog functionality is available to you too as an option. Jackson will explain the details :-)
-
JacksonP, in reply to
Blue Nile? I think I just found some musicks I haven't heard before and very much like. Thanks.
Wow! A Walk Across the Rooftops is my all time favourite nostalgia music, hence using it in the title.
Jackson will explain the details :-)
Heh! I'm not claiming to be an expert on this new setup, although in the process of getting this going I've done just about everything there is to be done... wrongly. So I can help in that respect.
Drop me an email Damian if you run into any problems.
-
Joe Wylie, in reply to
Kodachrome colour is pretty resilient.
Thanks for those, very nice.
The late great Kodachrome can be about as close as it gets to time travel (click on image for hi-res 1949). -
Ian Dalziel, in reply to
-
Joe Wylie, in reply to
Kodachrome
* no not Paul Simon...
Well they finally took our Kodachrome away.
A muthalode of historical examples here, some breathtakingly gorgeous. There must be some great NZ examples waiting to be literally brought to light. -
Paul Williams, in reply to
All I can say to all those who have come early to Capture, please stay late.
Oh thank you so much, I remember this very fondly from school dances.
-
-
Islander, in reply to
I scanned the family photo albums some years back, with my mother making comments/identifying people & places…some of them date back to the 1870s…
and sent dvd/cd copies to all relevant whanau.I think that is the sticking point: most of my family stuff is just that (tho’ a pictorial historian could have a field day with costumes/feasts/changed nature of localities…)
Post your response…
This topic is closed.