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Lomography for Noobs
1. This presentation was prepared for attendees of Barcamp Auckland on Saturday 16th July, 2011. It’s not endorsed by Lomography. All photographs are property of Anthea Whittle, except product photographs which are sourced via lomography.com.
2. What to expect What is Lomography? The Ten Golden Rules Diana F+ and Diana Mini Photo Recipes Real live conversation!
21. More control, and lessOne moment captured with one image, which may look technically “bad”, but which will capture your memory with room for your own elaboration on the story.
33. Meet Diana The original Diana was created in the 1960’s by the Great Wall Plastics Company in China. It was created for promotions, and cost about $1 to make each. It was a failure. In the early 1970’s, production ceased. Artists loved the images from Diana cameras, and hunted them out for their dreamy soft focus, sharp saturated colours, and unpredictable blurring and light leaks. The Lomographic Society International decided to recreate the Diana, and add some new features. The Diana F+ was released in 2007. The Diana F+
34. Clones The original Diana inspired other companies to produce “clones”. Clones usually had additional features, shapes and colours. Dianas were also produced for clients like the Readers Digest as giveaways and promo gear. Keeping with tradition, Lomography also produce clones for special events. There are clones for music artists, characters and designers. There was also a special release to raise funds for the Japan tsunami this year.
63. F+ FlashFlash fires when the shutter is released to stop motion in the main scene. Holding the shutter open creates light trails in a night scene where there are lights ahead of the lens.
69. Bright day timeThe camera was held steady on railing. First exposure was made when the jumper was on the board. Second exposure in mid air. Creates a “ghost” of the areas that have changed in the image between exposures.
75. Clear day timeExposures were taken quite quickly in succession to coordinate the different horizon lines. First exposure: Solid shapes in upper half stay distinctive. Second exposure: sky upper half, solid shapes in bottom half.