Kodak Aerochrome III Infrared Film 1443 was discontinued more than a decade ago, and it now changes hands on eBay for more than $100 for a single roll. If you were to head out with one of these few remaining canisters loaded into your camera, what would you shoot?

Jason Kummerfeldt of grainydays scooped up a handful of rolls of Aerochrome a few years ago and wandered the hills of northern California to produce some mind-bending colors and make the most of this unique film stock.


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An initial version of Aerochrome was created in the 1940s as part of an attempt to give Air Force pilots an advantage when trying to spot enemies camouflaged among a canopy of trees. The theory was that lacking chloroplast, the uniforms of enemy troops would stand out among the vegetation, which itself is converted by the film to vibrant pink. In the 1960s, Kodak released a consumer version that was in production until its demise in 2010.

Andy Day is a British photographer and writer living in France. He began photographing parkour in 2003 and has been doing weird things in the city and elsewhere ever since. He's addicted to climbing and owns a fairly useless dog. He has an MA in Sociology & Photography which often makes him ponder what all of this really means.

Electronic stabilization is what you find on cameras like the GoPro Hero cameras since version 6 or the DJI Osmo Action. But also cameras like the Canon M6 mark ii have it. It crops in the image a bit and then shifts the image around to compensate for camera shake. Especially on the GoPro cameras that works extremely well.

Your camera strap can also help to stabilize your camera movement. Just hang it over your neck and push your camera away from you. So that the strap stretches. Now do your camera moves while keeping the strap stretched.

Using slow-motion makes your footage look smoother. So shakes are there but it makes it less visible. You can do that by recording your videos in a higher framerate as you export it. For example, if you record your video in 4K with 60fps and you edit/publish your video in 24fps, you can slow it down to 40% of its original speed. if you shoot in 1080 with 120fps and you edit/publish in 30fps, you can slow it down to 25% of its original speed.

I do use this move a lot in my videos to bring slight movements in it. It works especially great when you have a foreground object. In this case, the foreground object moves fast and the background slow.

At rotation moves, you also move your camera to the left or right side. But at the same time, you rotate the camera against its main direction. So if you move the right you turn your camera to the right and the opposite.

There are two variations of that. You can either move your camera on one straight line while rotating it, so basically a sliding movement while rotating your camera slightly. Or you can move the camera around the main subject like a circle. The last option makes the background move even faster.

The way you do it is the same as the normal slide moves. Just that you rotate your camera while doing that. Also, make sure to generate the movement as much with your body as possible instead of using your arms.

I personally use the up and down slide move mostly for close up shots to make it a bit more interesting. Rotating up- and down moves are nice for revealing shots. So your camera first points down to the ground, basically showing nothing. Then it turns up and shows whats going on. But you can also do the opposite (up to down) to transition into other shots if it fits.

To do the slide moves up and down, you can actually use your hands and arms as in this direction you get less shake by doing so. If you want to make a longer movement, bent your knees to go down and then come up. Use your full body.

This only creates small movements. If you want to do bigger forward or backward movements, you have to hold your camera and upper body steady and then walk with small steps at a constant speed to avoid shake as much as possible. Also, hold your lens at the front to avoid shake.

If you want to create some nice in-camera transitions, you can simply move your camera a bit longer as you would usually do at the beginning and the end of each shot. You can then speed-ramp the clips in post at the beginning and the end and you get some nice speed-ramp transitions.

The shots itself are quite obvious as they cover most angles you can move your camera in to get b-roll footage. So the challenge is really not to find out what moves you can get but to learn how to do them without getting too much shake.

A bipartisan group of senators trying to find 60 votes for a legislative response to recent mass shootings is homing in on a proposal to provide grants for states to implement so-called red flag laws that would allow courts to order the temporary seizure of firearms from individuals deemed a threat to themselves or others.

Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., have teamed up on red flag law legislation in recent years but have never found enough Republican support to get the votes needed to overcome a filibuster in the Senate.

The House is planning to vote in June on a current version of a bill Blumenthal and Graham first introduced in 2018 after 17 people died in a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. That bill would allow law enforcement or family or household members of an individual threatening harm to themselves or others to petition federal district courts for extreme risk protection orders.

Murphy hosted meetings with senators in the Capitol on Thursday and said he plans to continue the negotiations over the break. While he sought to avoid predicting what legislative proposals, if any, would be successful, he confirmed the bipartisan interest in incentivizing states to implement red flag laws.

Since the 1960s, the term has evolved, describing cars combining elements of both station wagon and coup body styles, with or without reference to the historical usage for shooting parties.[8] During the 1960s and early 1970s, several high-end European manufacturers produced two-door shooting brake versions of their sports cars. Following a hiatus from the mid 1970s until the early 2010s, the shooting-brake body style entered a resurgence.

A horse-drawn shooting brake was a variation of the break (also spelled brake). Originally built as a simple but heavy frame for breaking in young horses to drive, over time it became a gentleman-driven vehicle and was popular for such aristocratic sports as shooting parties. Taking the design from the rear-loading horse-drawn sporting vehicle, the station wagon was born, retaining the term "shooting brake".[9][6][2]

There is no universally agreed definition of a shooting brake as an autobody style; however the common themes are the coup and station wagon, and the historical usage of the vehicle for hunting trips.[10][11][12] Descriptions of the body style and usage of the term include:

In the early 1900s, the Scottish Albion Motors began producing shooting brake models, described in the weekly magazine The Commercial Motor as having "seats for eight persons as well as the driver, whilst four guns and a large supply of cartridges, provisions baskets and a good 'bag' can be carried."[17] The 1912 Hudson Model 33 was described in England as a shooting brake, on the basis that "it was also used to carry the beaters to and from the location of the shoot, and for bringing back the game shot".[18]

Early[when?] motorized safari vehicles were described as shooting brakes with no windows or doors. One such description read: "Instead roll-down canvas curtains were buttoned to the roof in the case of bad weather. These cars were heavy and comfortable in good weather and allowed quick and silent exit as no shooting was permitted from the vehicles."[19] During the 1920s and 1930s, shooting brake vehicles were popular in England and were produced as shooting brakes from the factory or converted by coachbuilders. The term "estate car" began to be used instead of shooting brake, as the use of the vehicle expanded from just shooting parties to other domestic uses including ferrying guests and their luggage to and from railway stations.[7]

During the 1960s and early 1970s, several high-end European manufacturers produced two-door shooting brake versions of their sports cars, including the 1960 Sunbeam Alpine Shooting Brake and 1965 Aston Martin DB5 Shooting Brake.[8][20][21] The 1966 Sunbeam Alpine was a limited-production three-door variant of its two-door open sports car with leather interior and walnut trim, selling at a price double its open counterpart and marketed as a shooting brake.[22][23][24] The Aston Martin DB5, DB6, and DBS shooting brakes were custom manufactured by coachbuilder Harold Radford from 1965 until 1967.[25]

A prototype DB5 shooting-brake was custom produced by the factory for David Brown, an avid hunter and dog owner, and a further 11-12 coups were custom modified for Aston Martin by independent coachbuilder, Harold Radford.[26][27] In August 2019 a DB5 sold for a record $1.765m (1.456m),[28] making it the most valuable Shooting Brake bodied-car of any marque sold at auction. In 1992, Aston Martin manufactured in-house a limited production shooting brake variant of its Virage/Vantage, including a four-door shooting brake.[29]

Mostly dormant since the mid-1970s, the shooting brake term was used in 2004 to describe the Chevrolet Nomad concept car.[8] The following year, the Audi Shooting Brake concept car debuted at the Tokyo Motor Show. Several other cars have been described by journalists as shooting brakes, including 2005 Dodge Magnum Station Wagon,[41][42][43] 2006 Renault Altica concept car,[44] 2008 Mini Clubman,[45] 2011 Fisker Surf concept car,[46] and the 2011 Ferrari FF.[47][48] The first production model of the 21st century marketed as a shooting brake was the 2012 Mercedes Benz CLS-Class Shooting Brake (X218),[49][50] which was previewed as the Shooting Brake concept car at Auto China.[51][52] This model has four passenger doors, which is at odds with some definitions of a shooting brake as having two doors. In 2015, Mercedes-Benz added the smaller CLA-Class four-door shooting brake to the model range.[53][54][55][56] 152ee80cbc

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