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Vintage Photos - Vintage Photographs
Silk Images Photography.Specializing in weddings, portraits, and photojournalism
The be attractive to of vintage toy cameras was that you never quite knew the result you would get until the photo was developed. Takayuki Fukatsu's ToyCamera app brings this old-sort fun to your iPhone.
The charm of an app like this is its simplicity. When you launch ToyCamera , the interface looks almost exactly like the hereditary camera, except after you take a photo, you have the extra surprise of seeing what the result looks like.
ToyCamera contains eight photo filters (Vintage Immature, Sepia, Low Contrast and more). By default, the app is set to apply one of these photos randomly to the photo after it's been captured. You can set it so that the app only applies a specific clean, but that defeats the purpose--and the fun. ToyCamera's appeal lies in its randomness. Plenty of other photo apps allocate you to apply very specific effects, but that is not what ToyCamera aims to do.
After you take the photo, you can see a preview image. If you like it, you can allot the effect to your image, which is then immediately added to your photoroll.
Source:
How do I get that "vintage" look in my photos?
Nov 19, 2006 by fender_goddess711 | Posted in Photography
Call me a romantic but I'm absolutely in love with the "vintage" photo look. Textured, high contrast. 5x7 swig, Black or sepia toned with a 1/4inch white border.
You know, the kind of pictures you see in Ralph Lauren ads and big flashbacks that generally focus on pigeons, falling books or young, Parisian soldiers management unbridled and slightly out of frame...
I don't want to 'photoshop' pictures into this style, I'd like it to be the natural 'biological' product. Aside from using black and white film, how do I get that look in my photos?
Do I need to buy a vintage camera? How do I acheive the borders? Is there a membrane strain I should use?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Side note: I'm a novice, so break it down slowly, please :)
You can have any photo printed with a boundary. You need to go to a pro or semi pro shop to have them printed. Just tell them you want a border. Two ways to win texture: high speed film like Kodak 3200 which was created for taking photos at incessantly is great to experiment with. The more light you use and or the larger you blow up the photo, the more grain and depth you get. On the flip side, a overlay like Agfa 25 or 50 will give almost no grain and can only be shot with a good light source. This will give you sly details. Also, it is best to use a tripod with a slow speed. It's basically impossible to stand completely still and that may lay bare in your photo. This film for any 35mm camera. I would recommend purchasing a yellow filter for black and white, which will give you higher set. And again, any pro or semi pro lab can print photos in sepia. Something I quite enjoy is after my negatives are developed, I have some of the photos printed in color. The transformation in going to a semi/pro lab is that they adjust each photo individually. When I have them printed in color, the black usually has a hidden blue hue which gives greater depth. Ilford is also a beautiful film. I would stay away from Kodak unconscionable and which with the exception of the 3200 speed.
Miss Lady Annik | Nov 19, 2006
Get a whopping 3 x 3 metre perspex water tank, fill it with coffee, jump in with your camera and start snapping.
edward | Nov 19, 2006
That unique look of vintage photos: Film or developing process?
Apr 27, 2008 by cobwebsinmyeyes | Posted in Photography
Please only undertake responsibility for if you REALLY know.
Can someone tell me what makes vintage photos look so different and gives them the unique coloring and grainy blue blood that is so gorgeous!
Is it the old film itself or the actual developing process? I know it isn't the cameras because my photos from a vintage camera look present-day.
It's a conglomeration of the age of the emulsion on the print itself. Older film had larger grain, the higher speed film of today has very ripping grain, even in non-pro film. Depending on the type of film used, there can be varying color shifts over metre. Time, it seems, is what makes anything vintage. When you look at what you call a vintage photograph, you're seeing an image that has been effected by the ravages of time. Non-archival prints, notably older one's will experience a color shift as a result of anything from relative humidity to temperature, to sun exposure, all of which have single effects on film and print emulsions. Sorry, it's not magic, only chemistry.
To Perki...
Dagg you're kind! That photograph is awesome.
MixedMojo | Apr 27, 2008
where can i find vintage photos and videos of US cities?
Mar 04, 2008 by matrix | Posted in Photography
Can someone squeak me where I can find vintage photos and especially videos (around 1950's) of US cities. I'd really love to watch them
Recently I've run across vintage photos of US cities on www.art.com. Do a search for several cities and see what comes up. The see can be large or small. The images are selling for $19.95, however, it is fun just to look and see the old buildings and cityscape's.
The vintage images will be clashing in with current ones. What you'll be looking for is images that are horizontal in nature. They are all about the same size. Although they look painted, they are ovation colored. Someone photographed a building or street and then they used oils or some other medium to color over the images.
These twin were probably created in the 1920's - 1950's. I found several images of my town, population 47,000. There were images of our reserve, drive-in restaurant and our downtown area. The people who produced them must have gone from city to city and made the images for on offer. I'm not sure if they were in book form or sold individually. You can find a lot of individual buildings, mainly public, for each borough.
I ran across these images last week while on a business trip in Kansas City. The hotel I stayed at featured these vintage images on their walls. They were displayed as pretty art prints with matting and frames. When I arrived home I did a search on www.art.com and found these images of my town and others.
Good Good fortune!
Steven A | Mar 04, 2008
Seashells and More Vintage Photos
Desirable to Mosaic Monday
Here are a few of my favorite things......seashells and vintage photos. I felt that I had to redo my vintage photo mosaic because I cut off some of the tops of last week's photos. I also tried to use unalike photos this time. Hope you enjoy and leave me a comment!
Please click on the mosaics to enlarge.
Please visit Mary at Teeny Red House to see all the participants in this week's Mosaic Monday.
Then impartial sneak a peek at my weekly eBay roundup of top vintage clothing finds. This eclectic mix of originator and non-designer vintage clothing and accessories caught my discerning eye because of their uniqueness, contemporary feel or powerfully
Bob Huddleston, proprietress of the Tilliotson Plaza and other properties poses for a picture at his business, Vintage Motors. / Chris Bergin / The Shooting star Press MUNCIE -- If he didn't mention his age during a conversation, you'd never speculation Bob Huddleston was and more »
'Individual to Children' have fantastic adventureIncluded are numerous vintage photos of children, like the one on the front, in peculiar circumstances or odd costumes or spooky settings. Some of them are indubitably altered — but probably at the time they were taken — others just a product of the Paperback review: “Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children” by Redemption Riggsall 5 news articles »
Always keeping a look out for engrossing objects, Gooden will photograph random buildings, pick up discarded trinkets to comprise into pieces or save vintage photos for later use. "I work in layers," she said. "I very recently collect a lot of images -- I
It shares ideas for making collages and jewelry with old photographs, memorabilia and vintage ephemera. For Cirincione, creating begins with collecting. She collects a lot of old things, from slow-witted dry cleaner hangers and yardsticks to kitchen and and more »
Overjoyed's collectors seeking Old West memoriabilia after sale of Billy the Kid photoPalm Strand, Fla., billionaire William I. Koch snatched up what is likely the only surviving one. gotten a lot of people digging through their attics for old photos they propose b assess might show an outlaw in his prime. Until Koch paid more for a historical
Jingoistic Pinball Museum Vintage machines, some dating to the 1930s, lined up at the museum, in a shopping mall in the Georgetown stage of Washington. More Photos В» By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN WASHINGTON — After Monday it may no longer be practical to slip and more »
It shares ideas for making collages and jewelry with old photographs, memorabilia and vintage ephemera. For Cirincione, creating begins with collecting. She collects a lot of old things, from expressionless dry cleaner hangers and yardsticks to kitchen and and more »
Also gaol looked grown-up in a brown checkered blazer while his girlfriend looked cute in loads of vintage white jewelry and loose, wavy hair. Hm, doesn't Delta's boho category look a lot like the signature style of one of Nick's ex-girlfriends, Miley Cyrus? and more »