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    Retro Cool

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    • boofredlayB Offline
      boofredlay
      last edited by

      Ironclads

      @unknownuser said:

      Ironclads were steam-propelled warships protected by armor plates. The rapid pace of change in the ironclad period meant that many ships were obsolete as soon as they were complete.

      http://cdn2.retronaut.co/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/269-520x380.jpg

      http://cdn1.retronaut.co/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/1123-520x330.jpg

      http://cdn1.retronaut.co/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/350-520x338.jpg

      http://cdn3.retronaut.co/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/437-520x338.jpg

      http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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      • michaliszissiouM Offline
        michaliszissiou
        last edited by

        I'm not sure if this is the proper topic but... enjoy, scifi-retro-cult lovers 😄
        http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=andromeda+nebula&oq=Andromeda+Nebula&aq=0&aqi=g1&aql=&gs_sm=1&gs_upl=2315l2315l0l6960l1l1l0l0l0l0l250l250l2-1l1l0

        And this one. A bit out of topic but I could not resist
        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXP4r8M3eGc

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        • boofredlayB Offline
          boofredlay
          last edited by

          1954 Volvo TP21 “Sugga”


          Sugga.jpg

          http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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          • boofredlayB Offline
            boofredlay
            last edited by

            Either retro cool or retro frackin' crazy! 😲

            http://i.imgur.com/DqfEr.jpg

            And this one I am sure everyone has seen before.

            http://esl-voices.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Iron-Workers-having-their-lunch-Manhattan-NY-1932.tphoto-by-BettamCorbisiff.jpg

            http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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            • urgenU Offline
              urgen
              last edited by

              .... 😎

              http://lh5.ggpht.com/_hVOW2U7K4-M/SlRfKzzRBJI/AAAAAAABDDc/SsvZHIcM1kE/s640/kjhgkjyguytuyt.jpg

              favicon

              (www.liveleak.com)

              --pupil forever...------

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              • mitcorbM Offline
                mitcorb
                last edited by

                Nice find, urgen:
                A similar vehicle was built back in the 1960's for use in oil exploration in marshland. It had a large rectangular deck and long pontoon screws. I remember the demonstration film shot with an elevated camera, showing how it could easily move left, right, circles, etc.

                I take the slow, deliberate approach in my aimless wandering.

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                • Dave RD Offline
                  Dave R
                  last edited by

                  That old tractor is very cool. I'd love to have one. This winter it would sure churn up the mud, though.

                  Eric, that guy hanging from the beam looks like an early PhotoShop job. 😉

                  Etaoin Shrdlu

                  %

                  (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

                  G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

                  M30

                  %

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                  • michaliszissiouM Offline
                    michaliszissiou
                    last edited by

                    Lovely tractor
                    Eric, both photos look like an early Ps work.
                    The first one, well known photo, it's obviously a montage. See environment around figures.
                    I won't discuss on the second one. Obviously a montage, once again.

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                    • boofredlayB Offline
                      boofredlay
                      last edited by

                      I am not so quick to discount those images. I can't say for sure about the officer hanging on but surely the one by Charles Ebbets is authentic.

                      @unknownuser said:

                      This 1932 photo by fearless photographer Charles C. Ebbets shows workmen eating lunch on the 69th floor of the GE Building during the construction of Rockefeller Center. The photo was originally published in the New York Herald Tribune. Notice that the worker on the far right is holding what looks like a liquor flask. I guess it gets chilly up there.

                      @unknownuser said:

                      Were these men, whose feet were dangling hundreds of feet above New York’s streets, out of their minds? Because, really, who will eat lunch on a hanging girder and, consequently, who would be courageous enough to take a picture during the Rockefeller Center’s construction – on the 69th floor?

                      This legendary photograph which portrays 11 workers having a lunch break defines the career of an American photographer, Charles Ebbets. In 1932, Ebbets was the photographic director of the building’s construction. He took this famous photo in September of the same year and shortly after, it was published in the New York Herald Tribune.

                      This became one of the photographs that changed the world. It was adopted by pop culture and has so many versions to date. Some of these were humorous renditions featuring Hollywood icons, the Muppets, and even the casts from F.R.I.E.N.D.S.

                      Here are a couple more of Ebbets famous photos.

                      http://www.wallpapersphotography.com/art-photography/lunch-atop-a-skyscraper/037.jpg

                      http://www.terra.com.pe/addon/img/noticias/18d5e9a12-charles-ebbets-p.jpg

                      http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_oQunymQFGrM/SasmH2RUXRI/AAAAAAAAC0I/D5B0eNQhvs0/s1600/slide0009_image028.jpg

                      http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_oQunymQFGrM/Sasl4f4kPYI/AAAAAAAACz4/_r9agE1jGpE/s1600/slide0011_image032.jpg

                      And the man himself.

                      http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_oQunymQFGrM/SaslFIR0FzI/AAAAAAAACy4/-XpABksAy6E/s1600/slide0016_image004.jpg

                      Now this one for sure is faked 😄

                      http://cdn.gunaxin.com/wp-content/uploads/gallery/lunchtime/lunch_atop_a_skyscraper-19.jpg

                      http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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                      • urgenU Offline
                        urgen
                        last edited by

                        ..... Harold Lloyd...😄
                        [flash=600,400:l9pvexk4]http://www.youtube.com/v/Ik5ph6ChO9Q&feature=related[/flash:l9pvexk4]

                        --pupil forever...------

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                        • thomthomT Offline
                          thomthom
                          last edited by

                          I came across the LEGO variant a few weeks ago - found a high-res version which I'll make into an A2 print on aluminum. 😄

                          Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                          List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                          • michaliszissiouM Offline
                            michaliszissiou
                            last edited by

                            Ebbets famous photos.
                            I know, they may be authentic in some way, some of them.

                            1. Can you please, explain the halo lighting around some figures? This indicates editing.
                            2. In some of these photos, watch the DOF, inconsistency? Yeah, the front buildings are in focus, same the figures that are very close to camera.

                            Anyway retro cool.
                            My favorites


                            RedSqlenintrotsky.jpg


                            Soviet_leaders_Red_Square_Moscow_1919.jpg


                            Voroshilov,_Molotov,_Stalin,_with_Nikolai_Yezhov.jpg

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                            • Dave RD Offline
                              Dave R
                              last edited by

                              Keep in mind that in those days, the air in the cities was a whole lot thicker than it is these days. Lots of coal being burned and no regulations on pollution.

                              Those images are on some larger format film--notice the camera in the hands of the photographer. Probably 4x5 or possibly a 5x7 camera. Hand holding a camera like that means he was probably not focusing it on his subjects but just setting the focus more by guess. He'd know the depth of field range for the aperture he's using and set the focus so his most distant subject is near the far end of the range. I expect the halo at the center of the images is probably due to issues with the lens, shutter and the aperture. A leaf shutter opens from the center outward and at high (relatively speaking) shutter speeds, the center of the image receives more light than the edges.

                              Etaoin Shrdlu

                              %

                              (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

                              G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

                              M30

                              %

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                              • michaliszissiouM Offline
                                michaliszissiou
                                last edited by

                                @Dave R
                                I love these old cameras, I know what you mean but this isn't the case.
                                There's a halo around the figures. Not an aperture neither a vignette effect. It's definitely a retouching. If it's a hoax, I can't be sure.

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                                • andybotA Offline
                                  andybot
                                  last edited by

                                  @michaliszissiou said:

                                  @Dave R
                                  I love these old cameras, I know what you mean but this isn't the case.
                                  There's a halo around the figures. Not an aperture neither a vignette effect. It's definitely a retouching. If it's a hoax, I can't be sure.

                                  It could also just be a darkroom thing - if the print was made by burning and dodging around the figures, the background around them would be blown out.

                                  http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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                                  • michaliszissiouM Offline
                                    michaliszissiou
                                    last edited by

                                    See, on the last photo I posted, Lenin and Molotov. Around Molotov's figure there's a halo too. Very common on old photos. Adopted from oil painting technics.
                                    However, you may think that it's another fake photo and you may be right. We weren't there. Photos aren't real documents, always, they never were. Long time before Ps.

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                                    • DanielD Offline
                                      Daniel
                                      last edited by

                                      I did some reading up on "Lunch atop a Skyscraper," and it was interesting. The photographer wasn't identified until fairly recently. Although staged, the photo wasn't faked. The halo you see are actually clouds in the background, they are so high up. Also, unkown to viewers, there is a roof surface a few stories below, so if they fell they wouldn't have had too far to go.

                                      I remember seeing film of steel workers on skyscrapers. It seemed to defy logic (and prudence) to be so high up and walking on such narrow steel beams, before the age of safety harnesses, but they did it.

                                      My avatar is an anachronism.

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                                      • DanielD Offline
                                        Daniel
                                        last edited by

                                        Michel, looking at the photos of Lenin with and without Molotov, what jumps out immediately is that the second image has less resolution, so it's hard to compare the two. It appears there is a lot of light reflecting off the river, and possibly off the white wall in the background. I wonder if what you are seeing as a halo is not a lot of reflected light behind the figure.

                                        My avatar is an anachronism.

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                                        • michaliszissiouM Offline
                                          michaliszissiou
                                          last edited by

                                          Daniel, not a halo, an editing again. I wonder if Molotov is a fake.
                                          The scale of these figures is a bit... out of scale. I wonder.
                                          Is there anything true on these photos?

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                                          • boofredlayB Offline
                                            boofredlay
                                            last edited by

                                            Meanwhile, back on topic...

                                            @unknownuser said:

                                            The Douglas TB2D Skypirate was a torpedo bomber intended for service with the US Navy’s aircraft carriers. Two prototypes were completed, but the dedicated torpedo bomber was becoming an outdated concept and with the end of World War II, the type was no longer needed, resulting in the project’s cancellation.


                                            D01.jpg


                                            D02.jpg


                                            D03.jpg


                                            D04.jpg


                                            D05.jpg

                                            http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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