The Genius of Photography
The Genius of Photography
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The Most Valuable Images Ever Captured on Film ? - The Zapruder Film
In the annals of historical documentation, few artifacts possess the visceral potency and enigmatic resonance of the Zapruder Film. Captured by Dallas businessman Abraham Zapruder on November 22, 1963, this unassuming strip of celluloid, only 486 frames long captured one of America's greatest crimes on film and in the process made its creator incredibly wealthy. #abrahamzapruder #jfk #jfkassasination #jfkconspiracy #zapruder
zhlédnutí: 231

Video

Eddie Adams Portfolio - His 50 Best Photographs
zhlédnutí 232Před 7 měsíci
Eddie Adams, a luminary in the realm of photojournalism, etched his name into history through a lens that bore witness to the complexities of human experience. Perhaps best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph capturing the summary execution of a Viet Cong prisoner on the streets of Saigon during the Vietnam War, Adams had an uncanny ability to distill the essence of a moment with un...
Robert Capa Portfolio
zhlédnutí 313Před 8 měsíci
Robert Capa, a name synonymous with courage, adventure, and the unflinching pursuit of truth through the lens, stands as one of the most iconic photojournalists of the 20th century. Born in Budapest in 1913 as Endre Friedmann, Capa's journey led him from the tumultuous events of interwar Europe to the front lines of some of the most consequential conflicts in modern history. Watch this video fo...
Muhammad al-Durrah - The Image Behind the Second Intifidah
zhlédnutí 723Před 8 měsíci
Muhammad al-Durrah, a name that reverberates with profound significance, is emblematic of the enduring struggles and tragedies that have shaped the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The widely circulated images of Muhammad, caught in a crossfire between Israeli soldiers and Palestinian militants, captured the world's attention and became an enduring emblem of the human cost of the conflict. The con...
Henryk Ross Portfolio - The Lodz Ghetto
zhlédnutí 291Před 9 měsíci
Henryk Ross, a photographer whose lens bore witness to one of the darkest chapters in human history, emerges as a poignant chronicler of resilience and resistance during the Holocaust. Watch the video to see a selection of Ross' photography that he took while confined to the Lodz Ghetto, a place of unimaginable suffering and hardship. #henrykross #holocaust #ghetto
Henryk Ross - Photography as Witness Under the Nazis
zhlédnutí 265Před 9 měsíci
Henryk Ross, a photographer whose lens bore witness to one of the darkest chapters in human history, emerges as a poignant chronicler of resilience and resistance during the Holocaust. Born in 1910 in Warsaw, Poland, Ross began his career as sports photographer. However, the outbreak of World War II dramatically altered his trajectory. As the Nazi occupation tightened its grip, Ross found himse...
Seydou Keita Photography - His 50 Best Photos
zhlédnutí 219Před 9 měsíci
Seydou Keita, a remarkable photographer hailing from Mali, is widely celebrated for his iconic contributions to the world of portraiture and the documentation of West African life during the mid-20th century. Born in 1921 in Bamako, Mali, Keita's photographic journey unfolded in a time of profound societal and cultural change, and his work encapsulates the spirit and dynamism of his era. His un...
Seydou Keïta - How Africa's Greatest Photographer Went Undiscovered for Five Decades
zhlédnutí 921Před 9 měsíci
Seydou Keïta, a remarkable photographer hailing from Mali, is widely celebrated for his iconic contributions to the world of portraiture and the documentation of West African life during the mid-20th century. Keïta's unique ability to capture the essence of his subjects, is rooted in his remarkable talent for creating visually compelling narratives that provide us with a captivating glimpse int...
Nan Goldin Portfolio - 50 of Her Best Photographs
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 10 měsíci
Nan Goldin, one of the most influential photographers of the last 50 years, is a photographer who first became known for her "snapshot" style images of the post-Stonewall gay subculture of 1970's New York. Since then Goldin has gone on to cover many more topics, though all ones in which she is intimately connected. #iconicphotos #nangoldin #photojournalism
Nan Goldin - The Art of the Snapshot
zhlédnutí 12KPřed 10 měsíci
Photographer Nan Goldin charged onto the photographic scene in 1986 with the publication of The Ballad of Sexual Dependency. Within it were photographs of Goldin and her friends, giving us an intimate look into the post-Stonewall gay subculture of New York City in the 1970s. #nangoldin @iconicphotos #photography
Diane Arbus - 30 of Her Best Photographs (Portfolio)
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 10 měsíci
Diane Arbus was a visionary photographer who pushed the boundaries of photography, challenging our perceptions of beauty, normalcy, and humanity itself. Arbus' work is a testament to the power of the lens to reveal the extraordinary in the seemingly ordinary. Here is a selection of Diane's most famous photography, which she took over the course of her relatively short career. #dianearbus #iconi...
Diane Arbus - A Photographer of Freaks?
zhlédnutí 2,2KPřed 10 měsíci
Diane Arbus was a visionary photographer who pushed the boundaries of photography, challenging our perceptions of beauty, normalcy, and humanity itself. Her work is a testament to the power of the lens to reveal the extraordinary in the seemingly ordinary. Her photograph, Child With a Toy Hand Grenade, is not only one of her best known photographs - but one of the most recognizable of the 20th ...
W. Eugene Smith - His 50 Best Photographs
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 11 měsíci
Photographer W. Eugene Smith is one of the 20th century's most famous photographers. From his work in the Pacific during WWII, to his groundbreaking photoessays like Country Doctor for Life Magazine, his powerful and evocative images have left an indelible mark on the world of photography. Here are just some of the images W. Eugene Smith will best be remembered for. For videos about famous phot...
“Country Doctor” by W. Eugene Smith - The Birth of the Photoessay
zhlédnutí 9KPřed 11 měsíci
In 1948 W. Eugene travelled to Kremmling, Colorado, to photograph country doctor, Ernest Ceriani, as he tended to his 2000 patients spread over 400 square miles. The photoessay, published in Life Magazine, would go on to make the doctor and W. Eugene Smith famous. The doctor for his tireless work and W. Eugene Smith for his mastery of the new medium of photography known as the photoessay. #icon...
Margaret Bourke-White Portfolio - Her 50 Greatest Photographs
zhlédnutí 1,8KPřed rokem
Margaret Bourke-White Portfolio - Her 50 Greatest Photographs
The Vulture & The Little Girl by Kevin Carter - Who is the Vulture in the Photograph?
zhlédnutí 24KPřed rokem
The Vulture & The Little Girl by Kevin Carter - Who is the Vulture in the Photograph?
Gordon Parks Portfolio - His 50 Best Photographs
zhlédnutí 6KPřed rokem
Gordon Parks Portfolio - His 50 Best Photographs
Margaret Bourke-White - A Witness to the Atrocities of WWII
zhlédnutí 707Před rokem
Margaret Bourke-White - A Witness to the Atrocities of WWII
Margaret Bourke-White Photographer (Documentary): Part III - The Great Depression & Life Magazine
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed rokem
Margaret Bourke-White Photographer (Documentary): Part III - The Great Depression & Life Magazine
Margaret Bourke-White Photographer (Documentary): Part II - Industrial Photography & Soviet Russia
zhlédnutí 907Před rokem
Margaret Bourke-White Photographer (Documentary): Part II - Industrial Photography & Soviet Russia
Margaret Bourke-White Photographer (Documentary) - Part I: The First Female Photojournalist
zhlédnutí 1,4KPřed rokem
Margaret Bourke-White Photographer (Documentary) - Part I: The First Female Photojournalist
American Gothic by Gordon Parks- Photographing Racial Inequality In America
zhlédnutí 11KPřed rokem
American Gothic by Gordon Parks- Photographing Racial Inequality In America
War Photographer Robert Capa: D Day & The Magnificent Eleven
zhlédnutí 1,7KPřed rokem
War Photographer Robert Capa: D Day & The Magnificent Eleven
The Saigon Execution By Eddie Adams: A Haunting Image Of The Vietnam War
zhlédnutí 480Před rokem
The Saigon Execution By Eddie Adams: A Haunting Image Of The Vietnam War

Komentáře

  • @touchmantouchman350

    👁️👁️😘

  • @robdiesel1579
    @robdiesel1579 Před 18 dny

    I work there. I've heard plenty of company stories from the old timers about this very event. The only difference in the version I've heard was that they contacted a few universities and the government with their unusual findings. It always ends in more or less words saying, they were told to "zip it or else."

  • @dennisgreen6222
    @dennisgreen6222 Před měsícem

    Yeah, if only it wasn't part of the cover-up...nobody can trust the zapruder film.

  • @LouiseIngram-hd5yc
    @LouiseIngram-hd5yc Před 3 měsíci

    I won’t choose an abusive surrogate family , I’m not gold. Channeling my abhorrent neighbours is enough to disturb a good Samaritan. 💎😏 for the love of god I will not trash myself again . Fortunately , like most people i can't suddenly feel part of a group that ive never been in with.

  • @VettsClass
    @VettsClass Před 3 měsíci

    Brilliance 🙌🏿✨📸📸 Gordon Parks

  • @user-wm7cd7uc4l
    @user-wm7cd7uc4l Před 3 měsíci

    i like these!!!

  • @jozefibarr1601
    @jozefibarr1601 Před 3 měsíci

    Really enjoy your top 50 photos series. Great job. Keep it up 😊

  • @luciafrobel5841
    @luciafrobel5841 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks for this wonderful video! Which music is it?

  • @binthere400
    @binthere400 Před 4 měsíci

    Congratulations for addressing the 'exaggerated' aspects of this story. And for pointing out the infeasibility of the lab accident story. There are, however, several points that do need to be addressed here. - Capa was not one of just four cameramen chosen to cover the D-Day landings. He was one of four cameramen in the civilian Ground Still Photo pool for the American Beaches. There were pool photographers at the British and Canadian Beaches, as well. There were also many other military cameramen present, some of whom landed earlier than Capa. In fact, virtually all of Capa's photos that day were duplicated by military photographers, still and motion picture, often showing the exact same scene at the exact same time. And showing better technical quality. Yet everyone ignores them. The image of Capa as the lone photographer in the forefront of the invasion is a fiction sustained by those who don't understand the scale of the photographic effort for D-Day. You also fail to mention the three other photographers (two military, one civilian) on Omaha Beach whose film from Omaha Beach made it back to London before Capa's. - The Falling Soldier photo from the Spanish Civil War was a staged fake, as were the several other photos taken that day. The second photo of a different soldier falling at the exact same spot, in the same pose, framed identically, just moment later is a good clue. Further, that sport was geolocated in 2014 and was many miles behind the lines when the photos of 'combat' were staged. It was merely crass propaganda. - The statement that on the 106 photos he shot that day, all but 11 were lost in a lab accident is wrong. No fewer than 60 photos he took with his Rolleiflex camera that day also 'survived' several of which can plainly be seen in your images of the Life magazine spread (all taken after he retreated on the LCI or back aboard his attack transport ship). - As for the magnificent 11, only 10 photos have even been seen. John Morris said there was one more, but it wasn't worth printing, which makes no sense. There simply is no 11th photo, yet people insist on pretending there was and it was 'magnificent'. - In two places (0:22 and 8:40) you inserted an image taken by Coast Guard cameraman Robert Sargent (part of a larger landing sequence) as if it were taken by Capa (perhaps in the belief it was the 11th photo?). It was not. The better quality of Sargent's photo, taken earlier in the landings (40 minutes earlier) and at a point where the assault troops took far greater casualties, merely points to the poor technical skills of Capa, who landed later (almost two hours after H-Hour) at a point on the beach which was lightly defended and saw significantly fewer casualties. People who look at Capa's photos and infer that their poor quality was a result of intense combat are reading into the photos what they want to see or feel. It is simply misplaced symbolism based on an incorrect context. This is a good cautionary example of not letting oneself get carried away by by a caption or context someone spoon feeds you.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 4 měsíci

      Thanks for all those points, it’s some really good feedback. I think you’re right on most fronts - Capa himself admitted he liked to paint a picture of himself as the gallant war photographer that wasn’t always true!

  • @remybousquet1749
    @remybousquet1749 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you ^^ I need to make a presentation on one of her photography and chose the DC4 one, I initally came to your vids to find out how she took this picture but there is so much more about her! Thank you for your hard work it helps me a lot. ( Sorry for my broken english :/ )

  • @kenconnolly372
    @kenconnolly372 Před 5 měsíci

    Soul searching, shows what a bit of grit and deterination can accomplish!!!

  • @martinslechtacom
    @martinslechtacom Před 6 měsíci

    2:27 that’s Josef Koudelka 👍🏻

  • @user-re1lu4nv9o
    @user-re1lu4nv9o Před 7 měsíci

    She said what she had to.

  • @gottanikoncamera
    @gottanikoncamera Před 7 měsíci

    Well done! By the way, Cibachrome was a very saturated printing process used for printing slide film on their special paper. It wasn’t actual film.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks for clearing that up - have to admit I wasn’t entirely sure what it was!

  • @huzar7336
    @huzar7336 Před 7 měsíci

    Why is the world so cruel. How can everyone not see the truth

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks for a leaving a comment. You’re right, it’s definitely an image which shows how cruel the world can be.

  • @ainnochaim9450
    @ainnochaim9450 Před 8 měsíci

    She's a hypocrite.

    • @johnnieboy66
      @johnnieboy66 Před 7 měsíci

      Could you elaborate? I'm curious how.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 7 měsíci

      Me too!?

    • @sundaepandaa
      @sundaepandaa Před 4 měsíci

      who isn´t.

    • @ainnochaim9450
      @ainnochaim9450 Před 4 měsíci

      @@johnnieboy66 First off, thank you for asking. I'm sorry I just now saw your comment when yt notified me of the last comment. Anyway, I call her a hypocrite because she argued in favor of taking money from so-called "philanthropic" organizations that includes money from pharmaceutical companies that she argued helped cause the opioid epidemic. Is there any such thing as dirty money? Are there any limits to who you take your money from?

    • @ainnochaim9450
      @ainnochaim9450 Před 4 měsíci

      @@thegeniusofphotography Why the question mark? Are you unsure if you're a hypocrite? How do you feel about taking money from the very people you claim are vile, evil, criminal, responsible for the unaliving of countless people, and who have destroyed generations of families?

  • @kiddo2260
    @kiddo2260 Před 8 měsíci

    Great video ❤

  • @meirchaimo6960
    @meirchaimo6960 Před 8 měsíci

    Have seen this image but never bothered to learn about its background. Great video

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 8 měsíci

      Thanks for the comment and glad you liked the video and enjoyed hearing about the story behind the photo - it’s definitely an interesting one!

  • @rayninness6303
    @rayninness6303 Před 8 měsíci

    One of my Early Photo Mentors! And yes he was a very Troubled Soul!! 😱😱

  • @rayninness6303
    @rayninness6303 Před 8 měsíci

    An early hero of mine! Such Strong Images!! 😓😓

  • @meirchaimo6960
    @meirchaimo6960 Před 9 měsíci

    Really appreciate your channel, great video ❤

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks man - means a lot. It’s still small and trying to improve with every video, so please keep watching!

  • @melissamenke4231
    @melissamenke4231 Před 9 měsíci

    I love all the signs of 1950s modernity used as props - it really captures a moment in time

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 9 měsíci

      Yup - his photography was very aspirational and so the props in the photos are very indicative of how his subjects wished to be seen/portrayed!

  • @RebeccaKowalskyPhoto
    @RebeccaKowalskyPhoto Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you very very much for this excellent video

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks for the comment and glad you liked the video - please keep watching!

  • @stuartfeen9236
    @stuartfeen9236 Před 9 měsíci

    W. Eugene Smith was the consummate photographer vs today’s (2023) “street photographers”. Smith will be remembered for generations. Today’s “street photographers” will shortly be forgotten. Great photography is not about always buying the latest and greatest gear. Great photography is about composition, thoughtfulness, and perhaps a never ending quest for humanity.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 9 měsíci

      Yup I agree - he’s definitely one of my favorites and no doubt one was of the best!

  • @guusbeeld
    @guusbeeld Před 9 měsíci

    So?

  • @calokid
    @calokid Před 9 měsíci

    2:04 into this and bam! Chills! These are good. I see black and white photos and start to imagine the colors. I am not sure I am supposed to...but definitely have an experience looking at these photos! The exposure is so perfect...and then to hear it's done manually is just wild and a credit to this photographer's true craftsmanship. Wow, this guy is an inspiration! Thank you for sharing this,.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks for the comment and you’re right, there’s a vibrancy to these b&w images that’s quite hard to explain - but definitely there!

  • @peterebel7899
    @peterebel7899 Před 10 měsíci

    Great collection!

  • @JeffreyHauser
    @JeffreyHauser Před 10 měsíci

    A unique man who was blessed with great talent, who had to overcome discrimination & racism. The legacy of his work in photography, writing , directing & literature is an inspiration to so many people today. Thank you Gordon, May you rest in peace with God & his angels.😊🙏❤️

  • @peterebel7899
    @peterebel7899 Před 10 měsíci

    Pictures tell history!

  • @adri.s
    @adri.s Před 10 měsíci

    thanks for your video

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks and I hope you keep watching. Always on the lookout for new photographer suggestions, so feel free to suggest any if you have them!

  • @timhouston4470
    @timhouston4470 Před 10 měsíci

    I remember when my ex brought home a pink hardcover book of her photographs back in 1988. The whole world shifted for me.

  • @melissamenke4231
    @melissamenke4231 Před 11 měsíci

    Wow! I think people's reactions/revulsions to her photography says more about society than about Diane Arbus herself.

  • @wedding_video
    @wedding_video Před 11 měsíci

    👍🏻

  • @JamesRKyle
    @JamesRKyle Před 11 měsíci

    ("The Available Light...... Any Damn Light That Is Available." - W. Eugene Smith.) Best words for any budding Photographer.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 11 měsíci

      Yup. Hope I used that as one of the quotes for the sections - if not, definitely was meaning to!

  • @ChristineWilsonPhotography
    @ChristineWilsonPhotography Před 11 měsíci

    Truely a great photographer 😊 she had incredible access to some horrific circumstances that people were living in day to day

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 11 měsíci

      Thanks for the comment and, yes, she covered some pretty amazing stories throughout her career!

  • @williambolton5679
    @williambolton5679 Před 11 měsíci

    I'm old enough to remember being visited at home in Massachusetts by a GP when I was a child. W. Eugene Smith is certainly a great American photographer, and "Tomoko in Her Bath" is without question the most powerful image I've ever seen. Thank you for this very well-made video.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 11 měsíci

      Glad you liked it! Hope you've seen a gradual improvement in the videos as I'm become a little more comfortable making each one. And yes, definitely have Minamata on my list of future videos to do!

    • @williambolton5679
      @williambolton5679 Před 11 měsíci

      @@thegeniusofphotography I went looking for books of Eugene Smith's photography on Amazon and was amazed at how few there are and how expensive they are. I did find a used paperback copy of "Let Truth be the Prejudice" in very good condition at a reasonable price and bought it.

  • @melissamenke8253
    @melissamenke8253 Před 11 měsíci

    It’s a model of healthcare that makes a lot more sense when you think about it: A doctor who goes in people’s homes, sees their environments, their families and their kitchens. A shame it could never pass today’s efficiency standards.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před 11 měsíci

      Yes - good point! There are a lot of advantages to modern healthcare, though I suppose in a perfect world we would be able to combine those with what also worked in the past.

    • @rayninness6303
      @rayninness6303 Před 8 měsíci

      As a Kid Growing up in Detroit, Michigan in the 1940’s ! My brother and I got immediate attention from or Doctor, who lived Right Next Door from Us! And the cost was Cheap $5.00 a Visit!! 😱😱

  • @allconsciousnesss
    @allconsciousnesss Před 11 měsíci

    the japanese instead of never forgetting, now became slaves of the american system. sad.

  • @kadevohn
    @kadevohn Před rokem

    Photography of nuclear tests has been well documented since 1945, with safeguards such as camera distance and special design features to withstand explosions. Despite these precautions, some cameras and film still do not survive the tests, filmmakers and historians said. the cameras were usually placed inside lead lined bunkers and used mirrors to film.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před rokem

      Thanks fo the comment. Yes, you're entirely right! Did another short on this recently - linking it here in case you're interested! czcams.com/users/shortsVahg_68igjU

  • @ivangarcia2424
    @ivangarcia2424 Před rokem

    How did the camera survive the nuclear explosion😂

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před rokem

      Thanks for the comment! To photograph the close-up shots they'd put the cameras into steel containers...did another video about photographing these explosions here! czcams.com/users/shortsVahg_68igjU

  • @andrewmosley2588
    @andrewmosley2588 Před rokem

    That footage of the trees and stuff is fake, I hate to burst your bubble. If it were real what happened to the camera that was there? Why wasn’t it blown into a million bits and the film destroyed from such high radiation contact?

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před rokem

      Thanks for the comment. I haven't looked specifically into the footage of the trees, but I did another short about photographing nuclear explosions which I'll link below. Generally though they would place the cameras in steel containers to protect them and then trigger them remotely. I'm not entirely sure about why the film wasn't affected by radiation. I tried to look into that and the only thing I could find was that perhaps regular film (as opposed to X Ray film) just wasn't sensitive enough to be affected. czcams.com/users/shortsVahg_68igjU

  • @1young-geezer
    @1young-geezer Před rokem

    Brilliant photographer, incredible collection of work shown here. Wonderful to see these now iconic images, took my breath away at times. Thank you for this video.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před rokem

      Thanks for the comment and glad you liked the video! Hoping to have an accompanying portfolio video like this with each of the photographers I do a video on in the future.

  • @Natescoop8800
    @Natescoop8800 Před rokem

    The photos were faked in studios idiot

  • @TheArtofPhotography-lh3kc

    Atomic tourism, that’s crazy!

  • @TheTobinJones
    @TheTobinJones Před rokem

    👍

  • @user-kx5zw8qi4m
    @user-kx5zw8qi4m Před rokem

    Interesting video!

  • @toddwieland7664
    @toddwieland7664 Před rokem

    bolox all unit pic men in every unit in ww2 had kodachrome only the repros for theaters were bw the bomb was a hoax

  • @TheTobinJones
    @TheTobinJones Před rokem

    🥊👍

  • @scottfineshriber5051

    I love his photographs. Talk about a picture being worth a thousand words…

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před rokem

      Yeah he was a pretty gifted photographer! I especially love his color series on segregation in the South, they’re all stunning.

  • @RSF-DiscoveryTime
    @RSF-DiscoveryTime Před rokem

    Your video is excellent, beautiful photos and good narration. 1st and last images are a perfect choice with the Lady & Gargoyle.

    • @thegeniusofphotography
      @thegeniusofphotography Před rokem

      Thanks John, glad you liked it! It’s early days yet for the channel so hoping to improve even more as I go along and of course cover many more photographers. So stay tuned!

    • @RSF-DiscoveryTime
      @RSF-DiscoveryTime Před rokem

      @@thegeniusofphotography I would also consider cameras themselves. There is ONE particular brand of 35mm still camera that dominated the market. I can't remember the name but there are PLENTY of beautiful photographs produced by this particular camera, I believe some going back to the 1930s or earlier. At one point it had a big huge flashbulb on it...kills me I can't remember the name.

    • @TheTobinJones
      @TheTobinJones Před rokem

      @@RSF-DiscoveryTime Perhaps you're thinking of the Speed Graphic? Though I believe that was a medium format, rather than 35mm...which partly explains why the photos were so beautiful. And good idea! I hadn't thought about cameras, but definitely like that idea. My next few videos will most likely focus on individual photographs, but I'll definitely file that idea away for some point in the future!