Quick Release System
Fanotec's low profile Quick Release System allows your camera to be taken on and off quickly while maintaining a reproducible position on Nodal Ninja 5 and NN180 (not suggested for us with NN3 due to possible adjustment limitations). Includes clamp item# QRC2 and plate item# QRP2. There is a 15mm slot on the plate. So you can compensate for off-set of 15mm on either side. There are 3 pair of sockets on the clamp, to which a thin rail plate is attached. These pairs are 10mm apart. The rail plate is attached to the center pair by default. By attaching the plate to the other 2 pairs, an off-set of additional 10mm is obtained. So a total of 25mm offset can be easily compensated by the QR2. However, the QR2 is 60mm in width, you can slide the plate out by another 15mm (also supported by the position stop on the clamp) without compromising stability. So there is a total of 40mm. Only a few point and shoot cameras will need this amount of off-set compensation.
QRC2 Clamp:
The clamp includes an integrated rail plate to allow mounting directly to the Nodal Ninja rail system.
note: the clamp will work with many Manfrotto plates and Gitzo/Giottos plates – does not fit the Gitzo G2285M).
QRP2 Plate:
The plate mounts to the base of your camera. Incorporated into the plate is a 15mm offset for battery grips (as with some Canon Grips) where the tripod mount is not centered with the barrel of the lens.
note: the plate will not fit Manfrotto or Gitzo clamps.
Price: $ 39.95
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Photography (10th Edition)
For introductory and advanced courses in Photography.
The London, Upton, Stone series has helped over 1,000,000 photography students capture their potential. And Photography, 10e is the most comprehensive, up-to-date resource for today's photography students. No other text teaches students the skills they need to use the medium confidently and effectively, while emphasizing both technique, visual awareness, and the latest technologies. This is the text that students will want to keep for years to come.
A picture tells a thousand stories, but the one it doesn't tell is how the shot was made. Barbara London and John Upton's Photography is an all-inclusive look at the craft of photography. This book will help any amateur move up a few notches, and it serves as a refresher course for professionals as well. The sixth edition of this classic work (the first was published in 1976) includes a companion Web site with interactive activities, Web resources, and a learning archive. Amply illustrated with at least one photograph or diagram on almost every page, Photography is the one reference work every student of photography must have–even those who will never set foot in a classroom. –Brenda Pittsley
Rating:
(out of 88 reviews)
List Price: $ 126.67
Price: $ 122.85
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Filed under Books by on Sep 8th, 2010. 5 Comments.
Turns out the Earth was flat after all.
At least until about a year ago. Then something changed. The world embraced the third dimension, lining up by the millions to see "Avatar" (and a dozen-or-so other 3-D movies), welcoming the arrival of 3-D TVs at electronics stores and witnessing the launch of the world's first digital camera that shoots in three dimensions. Just last week, DirecTV flipped the switch on the world's first 24-hour 3-D channel.
The revolution is here.
Except it's hardly a revolution at all.
And it wasn't a revolution in the 1950s, when the public first willingly donned ugly glasses in movie theaters. It wasn't even a revolution at the turn of the last century, when millions of people gazed in awe through strange-looking devices called stereoscopes.
Three-dimensional photography dates back more than 160 years. Queen Victoria was a big fan, dazzled by stereo images at an exhibition in 1851. There are also some nice 3-D photos of President Abraham Lincoln.
Since its creation, 3-D photography has gone from hot to cold to hot to cold to, well, you get the idea. All the while, a dedicated group of photographers, hobbyists and collectors continued to carry the torch, toting double-lens cameras and wearing strange specs.
On the crest of perhaps a new wave of 3-D popularity, the National Stereoscopic Association, a group of more than 3,000 enthusiasts, holds its annual convention about an hour west of Cleveland, in Huron, starting Wednesday.
Among the events: exhibits, photography outings, workshops, contests and an "adult theater" program that features nude 3-D slides, magazines and "other adult stereo items to offer for sale to an enthusiastic audience."
But the highlight of the convention will be Saturday night at the awards dinner, where a unique guest will address the audience and give a presentation — yes, in 3-D — about his book of historic stereo photos and his love of the art form.
The special guest? Brian May, a 3-D photo collector and lifelong stereoscopy devotee, who not too long ago earned his doctorate in astrophysics.
Most people know him as the guitarist and founding member of the British rock band Queen. (He also wrote a number of Queen's hits, including "We Will Rock You.")
"I'm the world's biggest fan of 3-D," May says in a recent phone interview from London. "It's been magic to me all my life really."
What is 'stereoscopy'?
The concept is simple. Humans have two eyes, roughly 2 1/2 inches apart. The left eye sees one image; the right, a slightly different one. Put together by our brains, the two single images become one rich three-dimensional world.
When photography was born, around 1840, the images, as amazing as they were, were only in two dimensions, literally lacking depth. Inventors began tinkering with mirrors and then lenses to put two photographic images — the left-eye view and the right — together.
By the early 1850s, inexpensive hand-held stereoscopes ("stereo" being derived from the Greek word stereos, which means "solid") were common. Users could insert a stereo photo card into the viewer, look in and see the two photos on the card become one 3-D image. In a world without radio, movies or even electricity, the public was in awe.
By 1856, the London Stereoscopic Co. had sold half a million stereoscopes and offered "upwards of 10,000" stereo views, according to an ad placed in a newspaper that year.
"As soon as you see the 3-D image, there's just no contest whatsoever," says May. "It's so much closer to reality than a normal photograph is. It's quite staggering."
Even today, in a high-definition world of nonstop visuals, people who look into a stereoscope for the first time react the same way, May says.
"Suddenly it clicks and there is that moment where people go 'wow,' " he says. "The 'wow' is the great rewarding thing for me, because they suddenly, at that point, they get it."
For decades, stereoscopes remained popular. With photo cards, people could gaze at faraway cities, exotic wildlife, even planets. An evening with stereographs remained a popular entertainment for decades, until the 1920s, when movies and radio become the rage.
The 3-D craze returned in the 1950s, fueled largely by innovations in photography, says George Themelis, a 3-D photo expert in Brecksville. (After a career as a materials scientist, Themelis now spends his days repairing stereo cameras and selling photo equipment on the Internet.)
It came back for a bit with the "Magic Eye" craze of the 1990s (remember the colorful blobs on the Sunday comics pages?) that left many people with crossed eyes and migraines.
"The popularity comes and goes," Themelis says. "When something new comes, like the 1950s when color slides became popular, it grows. Now with digital photography, it's popular again."
A virtual frame
Part of the reason the history of 3-D is marked with booms and busts is because of its amazing effect on the public, says May.
It becomes so popular, so quickly, that amateurs move in to make a profit.
"People jump on the bandwagon without knowing what they're doing," says May. "The result is people get headaches and they never want to see another 3-D movie. I'm sure that happened in the '50s, and I think it's in danger of happening now."
Although May always carries a 3-D camera and even snapped stereo photos while touring the world with Queen (you can view some of them here), he says he prefers "the Victorian form, where you just sit with a stereoscope."
FRANCES LINCOLN LIMITED PUBLISHERSOne of T.R. Williams' stereo photos featured in "A Village Lost and Found" shows a girl named Polly asleep next to a stove during the 1850s. To view these photos in 3-D without a stereoscope, line up the images in front of your eyes and try to look past the photos, to infinity. Relax your eyes so the photos eventually converge into a 3-D image. "Free viewing" stereo photos isn't easy and takes practice.May's book, "A Village Lost and Found" (Frances Lincoln Publishers), co-authored with photo historian Elena Vidal, is a collection of stereo photos shot by T.R. Williams in the 1850s.
Williams, a stereoscopy pioneer, wanted to chronicle a way of life in his home village in England that he saw being threatened by the Industrial Revolution.
The collection is a riveting, three-dimensional look at the life we read about only in storybooks, a life lived under thatched roofs, where women work at spinning wheels and men with long sideburns smoke even longer pipes.
"It's an incredible, evocative and powerful document," says May. "It shows a way of life, a way of thinking, a moment in time that will never happen again."
And viewing it in 3-D gives it something no other historical document can, he adds.
"People feel that they can walk in and see not people acting 1850s life, but the real thing. These are the real people who were there. That is the woman doing the last bit of spinning in that village. . . . By walking through this virtual frame, you feel like you could almost touch her."
DIY 3-D?
After that first "wow" reaction to a stereograph, the next question is usually, "Can I do this?"
The answer is yes. And it's getting easier.
For a century and a half, stereoscopy was a painstaking process in which you had to shoot — on film, of course — with a special two-lens camera or cross your fingers and take two side-by-side photos with a single-lens camera.
COURTESY OF GEORGE THEMELISThe 1940s and â??50s saw a resurgence of 3-D photography, including the introduction of the Stereo Realist camera, which was manufactured for almost 25 years and became the most popular stereo camera in history. After processing, the prints or slides then needed to be mounted exactly in the right position. If the images weren't aligned correctly, the hard work would be rewarded with headaches, even nausea, instead of that "wow."
It's all changed, however, with digital photography, says Themelis, one of the founding members of the Ohio Stereo Photographic Society, a group of about 50 members that meets regularly in Richfield to share tips, advice and, of course, their 3-D photos.
Last fall, Fuji released the world's first 3-D digital camera, the FinePix Real 3D W1. The $600 camera features two lenses and a screen that displays photos in 3-D, no glasses necessary. Photos can be viewed on special 3-D screens or, using free software available on the Internet, printed out in stereo versions or an anaglyph (an image that turns 3-D when viewed with colored glasses). The camera also shoots 3-D video.
Themelis has been impressed with the quality. "It's excellent," he says.
May calls it "a most wonderful toy. I love it."
The future
Can technology, the popularity of 3-D movies and the arrival of 3-D television finally push three-dimensional photography beyond just a once-a-generation fad?
That depends, say the experts.
Even with digital advancements, 3-D photos take longer to prepare and view than traditional pictures, says John Bueche of Avon Lake, president of the Ohio Stereo Photographic Society. Whether they catch on depends on whether the masses will want to do the extra work and pay a bit more for a camera.
"It could replace standard photography," says Bueche. "That's the hope of a lot of 3-D enthusiasts, but it's crapshoot."
May agrees that it's too early to tell.
"I'd like to think it's going to be with us forever now," he says. "But you can't assume anything. It may very quickly saturate. People may tire of it. And it may go away.
"Until it's unearthed again."
thanks to http://www.cleveland.com/
Filed under Examples of virtual tours by on Jul 20th, 2010. Comment.
Elephant Bathing in the Periyar River, Kodanad Rescue Center in India
At Kodanad in Kerala, the training centre for baby elephants is a true sanctuary to overcome the agony and pain of being an orphaned elephant baby. The baby elephants that are separated from their mothers in the nearby forest are rescued by the personnel of forest and wildlife and brought to the training centre at Kodanad. Located close to the Periyar River this elephant training centre in Ernakulam district has trainers, who are well experienced to care of the baby elephants; assuring them the best of parental care. Visitors come in large numbers to this elephant training centre to watch the routine of baby elephants and the unique bond they have with their trainers.
Filed under Collection of the best panoramas by on Jul 16th, 2010. Comment.














