lomo.kataan.org

don’t think just shoot…

Normal shot

No comments

Spool

Lomo LC-A, Lucky 100 film

(From the archives)

No comments

Discarded photos

Trash bin in the photo lab at Laney College, Oakland CA
(From the archives)

No comments

14 exposures, one frame

The film slipped out of the take-up reel on frame 10, I shot blissfully away without realizing.

No comments

Chairs

Just got back 2 rolls of film online from York Photo in record time - 8 days from mailing! York now provides unlimited hosting - low resolution (512x 384) images are hosted on their servers, and you can download higher resolution (1500×1000) photos from their site or order cheap prints.

Not bad for $2.10/roll plus $1.00 for prints online.

Got digital? You can upload your own images to them, too.

No comments

Wash

No comments

222gallery LOMO Exhibition, Philadelphia

A few collectives gave artists in Seoul, L.A. and Philly Lomo cameras and set them loose. The idea was to investigate — in 36 exposures — the way local architecture, physical spaces and urban environments shape the culture of a city and the lifestyle of its residents. The assignment was both liberating and stressful for Philly’s Ted Passon, who says in his artist’s statement, “[When] it dawned on me what it meant to only have one roll of film to shoot for the whole show … I started to get a bit nervous. There’s plenty of times when you just shoot a shitty roll and usually it’s no big deal because no one is going to see it.” In the end, Passon’s images reveal a Philly that we all know and love — row houses, cluttered apartments, birthday parties and corner bars…

Opening reception Fri., April 4, 6-9 p.m., runs through May 30, 222 Gallery, 222 Vine St., 215-873-0750, 222gallery.com.

No comments

Testing yorkphoto.com hosting

No comments

Lomo of the day

No comments

Focus shifts to keeping it real with a cult classic

…Sales of digital and mobile-phone cameras show no sign of slowing, but with sites such as Squarefrog springing up all the time, it seems that the cult of Holga will only spread as more of us swap our technically superior cameras for quirky lumps of plastic that look like badly made toys. “Until film becomes obsolete, nothing will drag me back to digital,” Williamson says. “It just doesn’t do it for me any more.” (The Independent)

[ via www.business24-7.ae ]

No comments

« Previous PageNext Page »