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573,00 kr

Approximately 255 pages with about 250 color and black and white images and this book is ENTIRLY pictorial. There is considerable debate among photographers about whether film is better than digital with about an equal number lining up on both sides and presenting their opinions and relevant and irrelevant data. It is not the purpose of this volume to espouse one position or another. It is sufficient to know that they are each different and subject to a considerable range of interpretation. However, it is quite enjoyable to take one of these old cameras, that have absolutely no automatic functionality, and create excellent images. I suspect that it is the same force that drives auto enthusiasts to take an old Model T Ford car and restore it. They certainly don't have the power and ease of operation of modern automobiles but they are extraordinarily fun to drive Unlike other books about old cameras this one does not dwell on the fine technicalities of the individual camera (although limited technical data is present) but to present images taken with each camera to show the reader concrete examples of images taken with each model. The Pentax 6x7 is a 6x7 format camera that is entirely manualand is capable of taking extremely fine images. It is built like a tank The camera was introduced in 1969 and has a wide variety array of lenses available for both 120 and 220 film. The 120 film provides 10 exposures and the 220 provides 20 exposures. As of this writing 220 film is available only in color whereas 120 is available in both black and white and color (negative as well as transparency). The camera is quite heavy and was used primarily as an in-studio unit but is certainly not impossible to use in the field by those sufficiently hardy to lug the beast around. The body is also equipped with a 'mirror-up' feature that allows for dampening mirror vibration for extremely sharp images, especially when using telephoto lenses. The author began photography and photo-journalism in early 1963 when he accepted an offer from his local newspaper to write about and photograph sports events at the Arizona high school where he was a junior. After a stint in the service, he had an opportunity to study photography and printing techniques with Bernard Hoffman, a true gentleman and scholar, and one of the earliest staff photographers for Life Magazine. Since that time he has had thousands of photographs and hundreds of articles published by more than 60 national and international periodicals. He was also a contributing editor for one of them for more than ten years. Topics ran the gamut from professional sports, medicine, archeology, and photography to science. After twenty years away from Arizona he returned in 1985 and it has been the base from which all his photographic excursions are launched. Along with many others he has embraced digital photography but can still be seen, from time to time, peering through the ground glass of a large format camera, hois