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Hot off our 50th episode, the Camerosity Podcast goes back to the roots of our name, exploring the rich history of Eastman Kodak, one of the most influential companies in the photographic world. You can't talk about the history of Kodak without George Eastman and what better way to explore that history than with Todd Gustavson, curator of the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, NY. Todd has been on the show before, but in this the 51th episode, he gets center stage, talking of his role at the Eastman Museum, the origins of George Eastman and how his company got started. In this episode, you'll learn about George Eastman making dry plates in his mother's kitchen, his motivation for making the original 1888 Kodak, where the name "Kodak" comes from, early 20th century Kodaks, prewar, postwar, and everything in between. Also joining us on the show is the only person in the US I would trust with Kodak Retina repair, Paul Barden. Back in 2022, long time Retina guru Chris Sherlock hung up his lens spanners and retired from Retina repair. Not willing to leave a void in quality Retina service, Chris passed on his knowledge to Paul, who lives on the west coast of the United States. This not only means that there is still a quality option for Retina repair, but for those of you in the US, shipping rates are much cheaper than to New Zealand! Listen to this episode as Paul talks about his work repairing Retinas, what some of his favorite models are, and what models he does and doesn't repair. In addition to Todd and Paul's massive amount of Kodak knowledge, we go deep into some of the best Kodak cameras ever made, the Kodaks Ektra, Medalist, Monitor, and Regent get discussed here. We talk about Walter Dorwin Teague, Dr. August Nagel, and Hubert Nerwin. Mike shares what his all time favorite Retina is to shoot, Anthony discusses his nomination for a medium format Retina, Todd and Mike talk about Joe Mihayli and his contributions to Kodak's legacy. As always, the topics we discuss on the Camerosity Podcast are influenced by you! We would love to hear from more listeners, especially those who are new to shooting film or collecting cameras. Please don't feel like you have to be an expert on a specific type of camera, or have the level of knowledge on par with other people on the show. We LOVE people who are new to shooting and are interested in having an episode dedicated to people new to the hobby, so please don't consider your knowledge level to be a prerequisite for joining! The guys and I rarely know where each episode is going to go until it happens, so if you'd like to join us on a future episode, be sure to look out for our show announcements on our Camerosity Podcast Facebook page, and right here on mikeeckman.com. We usually record every other Monday and announcements, along with the Zoom link are typically shared 2-3 days in advance. Our next episode of the Camerosity Podcast will be our widest ever, as the gang discusses panorama photography and panoramic cameras. If you've ever wanted to know what it's like to shoot a Hasselblad XPan, Soviet Horizont, Noblex, or a Widelux camera, this is the episode for you! Episode 52 will be recorded on Friday, June 30th. We hope to see you there! This Week's Episode What is the George Eastman Museum and Why Should Anyone Go There? Largest Collection of Nitrate Film / Over 10,000 Cameras / Not Just Kodak Is on Display / One of Louis Daguerre's Original Cameras Paul Once Got Liquored Up in the George Eastman Museum / The Museum Has an Impressive Music Room George Eastman's Early Years / Eastman Dry Plate Company / Eastman's First Film Wasn't Actually Film The 1888 Kodak / Origins of the Kodak Name / Variations of the Original Box Kodaks George Eastman Pioneered Dental Care and Donated a Ton of Money to Local Schools What Caused Kodak to Move Away from Simple Box Cameras to More Complex Folding and Other Camera Designs? Early Color Film Was a Two Color Film / Kodachrome Was a 6 Layer Black and White Film with Color Filters Super Kodak Six-20 / How Many Were Made? Kodak's Priority Was to Manufacture World Wide / Kodak Canada and UK Kodak Film Was One of the Most Complicated Consumer Products Ever Made Was It a Coincidence that Kodak Started Producing Much More Advanced Cameras Right After Eastman Died? Kodak 50th Anniversary Brownie Camera Was Given Away to Children for Free Why Did Kodak Hire Dr. August Nagel to Make Cameras For Them? The Original 35mm Type 135 Cassette is Slightly Different Than the Ones Today Introducing Paul Barden Who Studied Under Chris Sherlock to Repair Retinas Paul Does Not Repair the Retina Reflexes or All the Models Chris Repaired Disabling Dead Meters on the Later Retinas Actually Improves their Usability As There's Less Parts to Move Which Retinas are the Most Dependable Shooters After Receiving a CLA? Mike is Working on a Review of the Retina IIIC / Mike's Favorite Retina to Use is the Retina IB Not Having a Rangefinder is Not Always a Bad Thing / The Retina Accessory Lenses Aren't Very Easy to Use Besides the Retinas, What Other Great Kodak Cameras Were Made After the War? Kodak Signet 35 / Kodak Ektra / The Ektra's Focal Plane Shutter Was Like No Other Anthony Loves the Kodak Medalist / The Kodak Chevron is Not a Replacement for the Medalist How Much Influence with Walter Dorwin Teague Have on Kodak? Kodak Was Always a Film First Company / The Profit Margins Making Film Was 10x Higher Than Making Cameras Kodak Tourist and Monitor Folding Cameras / Series III Pocket Folding Kodak The Problem with Nearly All Folding Kodaks Are the Bellows, They All Leak Light Kodak Retina Bellows Usually Do Hold Up To Time and Rarely Leak Light The Kodak Duo Six-20 Is Like a Medium Format Retina / Kodak Regent Mike Summarizes Other Great Kodaks to Shoot / Kodak Signet 35 Kodak Dated Their Lenses and Cameras Using a Code Inspired by the CAMEROSITY Podcast! / UK Lenses Used CUMBERLAND What Was Kodak's Motivation With Instamatics and Disc Film? / Kodak Disc Film Was Better Than People Gave it Credit For Hubert Nerwin, Designer of the Zeiss-Ikon Contax II and III Designed the Kodak Instamatic Type 126 Cassette A Kodak Designer That Doesn't Get Talked Much About is Joeseph Mihayli / Mihayli Designed the Super Kodak Six-20, Ektra, Medalist, and Much More What Are Some Good Kodak Reference Books Out There? / Robert Shanebrook, Brian Coe, and Douglas Collins's Books Kodak's Major Developments in New Apparatus / Kodak Prototypes of the 1930s / Kodak's Crazy System TLR Kodak Super 35 and Kodak Technar Prototypes are in the Eastman Collection Anthony Was Heavily Inspired by The Art of Fixing the Shadow Paul Barden Can Repair Your Kodak Retinas (Excluding the Retina Reflexes) Always RTFM Before Shooting a Retina / Also Always Check the Exposure Counter Links If you would like to offer feedback or contact us with questions or ideas for future episodes, please contact us in the Comments Section below, our Camerosity Facebook Group or Instagram page, or email us at camerosity.podcast@gmail.com. The Official Camerosity Facebook Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/camerositypodcast Camerosity Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/camerosity_podcast/ George Eastman Museum - https://www.eastman.org/ Todd Gustavson - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkDCZrTKQaI Paul Barden's Retina Repair - https://kodakretina.exposure.co/the-story-of-the-kodak-retina-camera and https://www.flickr.com/photos/paulbarden/ Episode 8: Making Kodak Film with Robert Shanebrook Episode 25: Steve Sasson and the First Digital Camera Keppler's Vault 42: George Eastman Theo Panagopoulos - https://www.photothinking.com/ Paul Rybolt - https://www.ebay.com/usr/paulkris and https://www.etsy.com/shop/Camerasandpictures Anthony Rue - https://www.instagram.com/kino_pravda/ and https://www.facebook.com/VoltaGNV/
Hoy miércoles de ceniza damos comienzo a la Cuaresma del 2022, nos encaminamos al desierto. Un lugar de silencio y sacrificios, pero también un lugar privilegiado de encuentro con Dios. Estamos acostumbrados a mucho ruido, pero Dios habla susurrando a nuestro corazón. Por eso es bueno bajar el volumen del ruido del mundo, para escuchar con más claridad la voz de Dios en nuestra vida. Te invitamos a que te animes a vivir una cuaresma distinta.
Participar en apostolados, servir en tu comunidad, ser parte de grupos de voluntariado, acudir a retiros, conferencias y talleres que te ayuden a crecer espiritualmente....La lista es larga de todas las oportunidades que tenemos para elegir a Dios en nuestra vida ¿Te ha pasado que de pronto te sobrepasan las actividades y entras en conflicto porque quieres descansar, dedicarte tiempo a ti y a tus cosas, pero quieres elegir a Dios y que Él sea tu prioridad? ¡Hay una forma de vivir el plenitud tu momento y estado de vida de la mano de Dios! Escucha este episodio donde tuvimos de invitado al P. Brian Coe LC para decirnos cómo. No olvides que ya puedes encontrarnos directamente en YouTube "Amar ASY" y seguirnos en IG @amarasyoficial para ver todo nuestro contenido.
ASMR reading of Bloody Beaches: The Marines at Peleliu by Gordon D. Gayle, 1996. Enjoy with headphones. This is the TINNITUS & SLEEP version which includes a light thunderstorm for people who do not experience ASMR sensations from soft spoken words alone. ASMR is intended to reduce anxiety, reduce symptoms from PTSD and depression, and reduce other aspects like tinnitus to help you fall asleep of feel a sensation of calm. This book is public domain as produced by Brian Coe, Charlie Howard, and Project Gutenberg. On D-Day 15 September 1944, five infantry battalions of the 1st Marine Division’s 1st, 5th, and 7th Marines, in amphibian tractors (LVTs) lumbered across 600–800 yards of coral reef fringing smoking, reportedly smashed Peleliu in the Palau Island group and toward five selected landing beaches. That westward anchor of the 1,000-mile-long Caroline archipelago was viewed by some U.S. planners as obstacles, or threats, to continued advances against Japan’s Pacific empire. Support me: https://paypal.me/TomeByTome Support me on Anchor: https://anchor.fm/tome-by-tome-asmr Best way to keep in touch - Twitter: http://twitter.com/TomeByTomeASMR Athena's Archive ASMR: https://anchor.fm/athenas-archive-asmr Asylum ASMR: https://anchor.fm/asylumasmr/ YouTube: http://bit.ly/youtubeTomebyTomeASMR Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/TomeByTomeASMR For more about the Hunt for the Elder God Cthulhu, watch: https://youtu.be/x20EaYa1OPw --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tome-by-tome-asmr/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tome-by-tome-asmr/support
ASMR reading of Bloody Beaches: The Marines at Peleliu by Gordon D. Gayle, 1996. Enjoy with headphones. A tinnitus and sleep version has also been recorded for you which includes a light thunderstorm for people who do not experience ASMR sensations from soft spoken words alone. ASMR is intended to reduce anxiety, reduce symptoms from PTSD and depression, and reduce other aspects like tinnitus to help you fall asleep of feel a sensation of calm. This book is public domain as produced by Brian Coe, Charlie Howard, and Project Gutenberg. On D-Day 15 September 1944, five infantry battalions of the 1st Marine Division’s 1st, 5th, and 7th Marines, in amphibian tractors (LVTs) lumbered across 600–800 yards of coral reef fringing smoking, reportedly smashed Peleliu in the Palau Island group and toward five selected landing beaches. That westward anchor of the 1,000-mile-long Caroline archipelago was viewed by some U.S. planners as obstacles, or threats, to continued advances against Japan’s Pacific empire. Support me: https://paypal.me/TomeByTome Support me on Anchor: https://anchor.fm/tome-by-tome-asmr Best way to keep in touch - Twitter: http://twitter.com/TomeByTomeASMR Athena's Archive ASMR: https://anchor.fm/athenas-archive-asmr Asylum ASMR: https://anchor.fm/asylumasmr/ YouTube: http://bit.ly/youtubeTomebyTomeASMR Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/TomeByTomeASMR For more about the Hunt for the Elder God Cthulhu, watch: https://youtu.be/x20EaYa1OPw --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tome-by-tome-asmr/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tome-by-tome-asmr/support
Hailing from Wyoming and living just outside of Yellowstone, this week’s guest has the wilderness basically at his back door. Brian has a lot of experience in the outdoors and is a veteran, emergency responder and a wilderness response team member. Brian goes over how to be prepared when hiking, including the essential items he packs for emergency situations. He shares what is essential to carry in your first aid kit and how to be prepared and handle emergency situations. We discuss Leave No Trace and what that means in the age of social media. Connect with Brian: Twitter: https://twitter.com/wild_blogInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewildoutdoorsblog/Blog: https://thewildoutdoorsblog.comConnect with Lori: • Instagram: @thehikepodcast, @lori_the_explorer • Twitter: @thehikepodcast • Blog: thehikepodcast.wordpress.comEmail Lori at hikepodcast@gmail.com Music track "Two Mountains at a Time" from Live at the Fillmore by Pachyderm, used under the Creative Commons license. Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/thehikepodcast)
Take a hike through the woods of Wyoming with Brian Coe, the founder of The Wild Outdoors Blog. Brian grew up loving the outdoors as a Boy Scout & later decided to join the National Guard. Once he came home, he became a paramedic, and then a husband, and then a father. Brian recently started his blog where he writes and shares useful hiking tips, gear reviews, backcountry recipes, and more. Most importantly, he shares his love for the woods with his followers & the Take A Hike audience in this week's episode. Connect with Brian: thewildoutdoorsblog.com Twitter: @wild_blog Instagram: @thewildoutdoorsblog Pinterest: The Wild Outdoors Blog Connect with Take A Hike: Follow the show: Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | Tumblr Find the show: iTunes | Google Play | Spotify | Stitcher | TuneIn Email Shannon: takeahikewithshannon@gmail.com ***** Music in the episode is produced by BigBouncyBright, purchased via AudioJungle.
For this episode, Graham and Nick talk about focus and focusing mechanisms in cameras. Nick asks whether focusing is necessary and Graham talks about one of his favorite Flickr people, ChetBak59 (https://www.flickr.com/photos/129558209@N02) and his use of out-of-focus areas of images to great effect (9:15). Nick challenges Graham to take a photograph where the out-of-focus areas is the point of interest and the in-focus areas are secondary (14:58). At 16:00 the boys finally get to the definition of focus and how the lens creates this focus on a film plane or sensor. They then talk about the different methods to adjust focus in a camera-lens system (26:41). They also talk about how focus is verified so we get the result that is expected (38:25). With all that silliness about focusing complete, talk turns to a camera Graham built over the previous week, the Sixty7 Woody (1:10:30) Nick’s books this week are: CAMERAS From Daguerreotypes to Instant Pictures by Brian Coe (https://www.amazon.com/CAMERAS-Daguerreotypes-Instant-Pictures-Brian/dp/0517533812) 500 Cameras: 170 Years of Photographic Innovation by George Eastman House, Todd Gustavson (https://www.amazon.com/500-Cameras-Years-Photographic-Innovation/dp/1402780869/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1532023200&sr=1-1&keywords=500+cameras) Collecting and Using Classic Cameras By Ivor Matanle (https://www.amazon.com/Collecting-Using-Classic-Cameras-Matanle/dp/0500276560/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1532023493&sr=1-1&keywords=collecting+and+using+classic+cameras) Graham’s shout-outs go to Chetbak59 on Flickr (see link above) and moonchild1111 also on Flickr (https://www.flickr.com/photos/moonchild1111/)
Tonight we welcome Brian Coe, a vaping advocate who doesn't like Heat not Burn. We wonder why.
In this episode, you’ll hear about: -Why Brian’s thinks entrepreneurship is a means to an end, and why acquisitions that grow your business can be more gratifying than doing it on your own. -How his childhood independence was due to his “submarine” parents (i.e. the opposite of today’s helicopter parents). -Brian’s lack of interest in science as a child and innate propensity for business, much to his parents’ chagrin. -Starting his first company with his sister (using their father’s finances) and how they managed to maintain a high level of professionalism. -How culture can really shape your company, and why that doesn’t equate to having beers together. -As a boss, why it’s incumbent on your team to tell you how to improve, and how to create a place where people feel comfortable being candid. Catch the end of the episode, where Brian shares his insights on the future of healthcare technology and CRISPR, and why he’d want to most want to interview Michael Dell.
Brian Coe - co-founder of LithoLink, CEO - discusses insights into the world of leadership. Being a CEO stems from really knowing yourself, and Brian suggests ways to learn how to figure out who you are so you can lead from a place of real self-empowerment. Brian is a true strategic CEO (and my brother and business partner).
Alexis Goldstein and Brian Coe, from Devil's Backbone, talk about their entry into North Carolina from Virginia. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices