Difference between revisions of "User talk:Dustin McAmera"

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(Leica 1c)
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== Leica 1c ==
 
== Leica 1c ==
  
There is an incorrect picture on this page. It needs to be transferred to the Leica C page. It's caption should read "with accessory rangefinder", delete "accessory finder".
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There is an incorrect picture on this page. It needs to be transferred to the Leica C page. It's caption should read "with accessory rangefinder", delete "accessory finder".<BR>
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9/1/13 I've moved it on to the correct page and corrected the caption.

Revision as of 01:55, 9 January 2013


polaroid question

hello, I have been reading the Polaroid page, but to me it seems a bit unlogic...apparently there are no links to several series of cameras, or I am looking at the wrong places. I wanted to add the Polaroid Colorpack 88, but where?? Picture is already in the flickr pool. Thanks!

Blocking

As we continue machine-gunning down the kamikaze waves of spammers, I'm very doubtful "Bailey Helton" was a real person... but for names like that, which look marginally more plausible, lately I do try googling, searching Flickr users, etc. and maybe give them an extra day or two before nuking them. I did accidently block a friend of Steve's once  ;-) --Vox 06:45, 27 March 2012 (PDT)


Yes - I have been a bit red in tooth and claw today! I'll take some deep breaths, and have a weak green tea instead of the next coffee... --Dustin McAmera 06:53, 27 March 2012 (PDT)

Century

Write the Century Graphic its own page (perhaps the Crown should also be separated from the Speed too: a focal plane shutter is quite a big deal, and the lens usage of the two is different too). The CG isn't a small Speed, it's more like a small Crown; and what the hell is a flexible wire viewfinder?

The phrase seems to be lifted directly from this list. But I don't know what it means! As far as I can tell from your photo, both our CG's are identical—although originally mine had the rangefinder flashgun bracket you can see in some people's photos. In any case, I agree with giving the CG its own page: Of the whole Graflex press series, it's probably the one that is most practical to shoot with today. --Vox 07:26, 31 January 2012 (PST)

Information source? And publicizing new work

Hi again,

I've been lurking on the IDCC mailing list, which seems to include a number of "wood & brass" -era collectors. Might it be useful to put out a call there for photos or info, regarding some of the early British brands you've been adding? I can relay the request if you'd rather not get buried under the (surprisingly high) traffic on the list. The wiki's Flickr stream can host images from non-Flickrers, if needed.

Also—whenever you get a new or much-expanded article to a reasonably settled place, don't be shy about calling it to my attention. I periodically tweet when there's a noteworthy category, article, or contributor deserving attention. Things like this can help with our Google search rankings, and I'm often pleasantly surprised when Twitter followers retweet these posts.--Vox 17:50, 29 January 2012 (PST)


Hi Ross! It certainly looks worth investigating. I've signed up to the list. Did you see there is also a list called Woodandbrass on the same system (apparently dead - the archive of past posts goes up to April 2008). I'll watch what traffic there is for a bit, and judge what, if anything, to ask for, and maybe we should post something general about CW, the site and the Flickr group. Will people on a system like this have heard of Flickr? It all looks a bit old-school (says a man who's never seen Twitter or, for that matter, Facebook).
Another thing I really have to do is visit the National Media Museum (which used to be the National Museum of Film and Photography, and has Kodak Uk's collection of cameras, and (I think) most of what used to be the Science Museum's colection too). I don't know how much is actually on show, or what their policy is on photographing the exhibits, but it's only in the next town, and I've never been to the museum part (I've been to their cinema a few times). They seem to have a research access system; need to find out if that extends beyond documents.
To be honest, I don't think it's a disaster if a page on CW doesn't show a picture. If we're aware that a certain camera existed, and we know a few facts about it, that's worthwhile even if we don't have a picture of it. Of course, pictures are great, and I like at least to have some to link to. Some of the Westlicht pictures are excellent, and they still have listings up that are ten years old, so I think they intend them to be there long term.
I'll try to keep a note of my (any anyone else's) best work; but, although I have enjoyed myself in CW over the winter, I'm not sure many of the new articles I've turned out are excellent. They improved coverage, and they let me continue writing when (as I said somewhere before) I have already gone beyond what I know a lot about. --Dustin McAmera 19:18, 29 January 2012 (PST)
maybe we should post something general about CW, the site and the Flickr group.
I have already made a few posts explaining what happened to Camerapedia, and inviting contributions to CW—in fact, a few may be sick of hearing about it ;-) But it would certainly do no harm to pop up there and explain that you're trying to improve CW's coverage of some particular eras/styles/brands of camera.
The National Museum sounds intriguing! I wish something like that were a little closer to me... All I can do is fill in the occasional Argus gap... --Vox 19:37, 29 January 2012 (PST)

Westlicht

Pete, I think, where you can, you should always provide a link to the 'real' Auction house site, eg Westlicht, Breker etc, and not to a secondhand aggregator like Live Auctioneers. IMHO Westlicht is the primary source and Live Auctioneers a secondary one. I only use the latter is there is no proper Auctioneer's site that has an archive (Which Westlicht, for ex. does)...keep up the good work and the trawling!--Heritagefutures 23:06, 24 January 2012 (PST)

I think so too; and where I can, I do. Perhaps you saw that I just replaced a liveauctioneers link with one to Westlicht, which I hadn't found the first time I edited the page. --Dustin McAmera 03:42, 25 January 2012 (PST)

USSR

Speaking of the "Former USSR" versus "Russia" question, I find the article Soviet Union a baffler. It should either disappear, or turn into something useful like a manufacturer list. Your thoughts? --Vox 07:28, 10 January 2012 (PST)

...perhaps along with Japan, Germany, USA and Great Britain, though the Soviet Union one is the worst of them. It's the curse of Category:Essayistic again. We must be collegial though; it seems that considerable change is afoot, and when Uwe next comes by, he's likely to have strong opinions about it. It may help if one of his favourite articles hasn't just been summarily deleted too!
There is a place in the world (and perhaps in the wiki) for an article on the Soviet Union and how its system created its unusual camera industry, but this is not that article. I would be in awe of the task of writing a more serious one, and I think it's been done quite well by Alfred Klomp, but if someone wanted to try I wouldn't discourage them. A list of camera-makers might seem to duplicate the function of the category (whatever it's called: now I've spent time thinking about this, I think 'Soviet Union' or 'USSR' is the category I'd have, not 'Russia'). Perhaps it's better just to refer to the effects of the Soviet system and history in articles when they are relevant to a particular camera or maker. I recall mentioning that Orwo had information and equipment taken in war reparations by both Soviet and Western powers, for example; and somewhere it must say that KMZ were freely given the FED to copy.
Similarly, it would be wrong not to mention Germany's history in the 20s and 30s where they are relevant. --Dustin McAmera 16:28, 10 January 2012 (PST)
Perhaps an article "History of photography in Country XYZ" could have some value—as long as it steers clear of vague editorializing re: politics or the "personalities" of different nations. Key inventors and breakthrough inventions; manufacturers; history of public adoption; significant photographers—I would read that. But as you say, it's daunting to begin. In any case, those article names should be changed, as we have no reason to write about a country in its entirety.
Point taken about not acting arbitrarily… but giving the opinions of those who actually get the work done more weight seems only fair ;-) --Vox 06:51, 11 January 2012 (PST)

I do agree that there is a place for articles here that address countries and even world locations relative to the photographic industry but it needs to be factual and contain dates and even production levels at specific times. Getting these facts may be difficult. In the case of the USSR there is the issue of the fake Leica's, who did that ? When you stop and think, two of the major producers of cameras were Japan and the USSR in terms of volume, yet neither of them had any role in the early development of the photographic process. With reference to Russia, the title must be USSR, volume production of Soviet 35mm cameras began in the Ukraine. I am sure many Ukrainians will tell you it is not Russia.

No problem with the edit on the Zenit, I overlooked the Zenit C page

Piewacet 12:48, 7 April 2012 (PDT)

Image links

Just a couple little points:

In this edit, you removed "in/pool-camerapedia" from a few image URLs. There's a subtle reason not to do that: When someone doesn't have a Flickr pro account (or if they let their Pro status lapse), and the linked photo is older than their most recent 200 images, the "plain" page URL becomes inaccessible. That's a problem, because sometimes a photo's caption or tags have additional details that may be useful to us. If the URL includes "in/pool-camerapedia" then all the members of the Camerapedia group can continue to see that page. The /in/pool-xyz URLs also preserve the Flickr-page visibility if someone changes a photo to private for some reason.

That makes sense (but my primitive mind was more comfortable with 'CW=Us, CP=Them'!) I'll go and undo the same change which I think I did today on Mansfield Skylark :( . On the plus side, I'm working on a killer page about payday loans for overweight Polish people - you're going to love it.--Dustin McAmera 11:28, 22 July 2011 (PDT)
Ulp!
Yes, decreasing "Camerapedia" instances is one reason why I've gotten into the habit of inviting everybody's photos to the CW pool, whether creative commons or not… --Vox 11:37, 22 July 2011 (PDT)

In this edit you changed the photo rights from NC to "with permission" after a photo was added to the CW pool. Actually, the rights always stay the same as shown on the user's Flickr page. The theory here is that they've granted creative commons rights to everybody, so we can't add more restrictive rights than they did. If someone wants to duplicate a wiki page elsewhere, with its image in place, that's okay as long as the the CC license allows it. Cheers! --Vox 11:02, 22 July 2011 (PDT)

Yes, I even knew that one, but had forgotten it. Thanks Ross! --Dustin McAmera 11:28, 22 July 2011 (PDT)
Somewhere in the wiki I'm sure I've added incorrect rights myself, just distractedly from having too many browser tabs open ;-) --Vox 11:34, 22 July 2011 (PDT)





Glad you like it!

Looks great on Agfa! Best, MarkDilley

Plurals

Dustin, you're doing good work. But you're not using HotCat (it seems). As soon as I started to use it, I found that it helped. Now that I've used it a little more, I find that it helps a lot. Try it! (How you do this is explained here.) You'll be glad you did.

Oh, and, uh, [cough] . . . could you please take a look at Ernemann Kino I? This (unsourced) piece defeats me, perhaps in part because it's an hour past my bedtime. -- Hoarier 07:42, 6 February 2012 (PST)

I have hung back from HotCat because it would be my first gadget, and I'm not sure I want it there if there's only going to be a short flurry of this stuff. I'll give it a try some time.
As for the Ernemann Kino, you found it... :p (I'm still trying to kick myself into going back to Voigtländer).

Hello from fatcatimages

Sorry - I have not contributed anything yet but I am a member of the Ann Arbor Area Crappy Camera Club.

I am a real person...

Scott

Leica 1c

There is an incorrect picture on this page. It needs to be transferred to the Leica C page. It's caption should read "with accessory rangefinder", delete "accessory finder".
9/1/13 I've moved it on to the correct page and corrected the caption.