I still need to hand in my Photography project, too! I tried printing on Friday but, bloody hell, the lab was closed. So now I guess I have to get the photos printed professionally, mount them, and hope Frank doesn't notice. Or perhaps I will just tell him I had them professionally printed, even though it's just this massive impersonal printer that flips them out with no care for contrasts or paper tests or A SOUL, and hope he doesn't dock me too much.
I also still need to hand in my director's report, which I'll be doing later this morning in true "I am always late with everything" fashion. If you go to mount your pictures today, do you want to do it together? As I also have to do that and it all seems very daunting.
Also, the pictures!! My three most favourite ones are the two curling slidy thing in motion pictures (in my world, this is what we call it) and the one of everyone holding onto the camera, as if by everyone handling it, it would magically fix itself.
They don't even spend time on it when it's done professionally? What the hell is professional about that? There should be a lab that takes the time that we do to develop each print. . . but then that'd cost a fortune. Damn technology. I hope everything works out for you, Sarah!
Frank will understand if they're not mounted, or so it seems by the email he just sent me (see my latest entry).
Those round redish curling slidy things in motion pictures are pretty nifty. That camera, on the other hand, was NOT nifty what-so-ever and DIDN'T magically fix itself when we all touched it. Le boo.
It's all this big machine, and then a lab technician or whatever might flip through each individual print while wearing very impersonal gloves (actually, the gloves are kind of cool and exciting) to search for flaws via the machine.
I hope he'll understand. Oh well. Tomorrow it is, then, I guess. (Rather than today, which was what I was aiming for but ... it's all so hard.)
And it's surprising that the camera didn't fix itself when you were all communing with it. That is actually very rude. Come on now, Bolex.
I love the Bolex, but this particular Bolex was just a pain and made me want to smash it to tiny pieces. Of course, I don't think Don or the Ice Technician of the Club would have appreciated that.
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I also still need to hand in my director's report, which I'll be doing later this morning in true "I am always late with everything" fashion. If you go to mount your pictures today, do you want to do it together? As I also have to do that and it all seems very daunting.
Also, the pictures!! My three most favourite ones are the two curling slidy thing in motion pictures (in my world, this is what we call it) and the one of everyone holding onto the camera, as if by everyone handling it, it would magically fix itself.
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Frank will understand if they're not mounted, or so it seems by the email he just sent me (see my latest entry).
Those round redish curling slidy things in motion pictures are pretty nifty. That camera, on the other hand, was NOT nifty what-so-ever and DIDN'T magically fix itself when we all touched it. Le boo.
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I hope he'll understand. Oh well. Tomorrow it is, then, I guess. (Rather than today, which was what I was aiming for but ... it's all so hard.)
And it's surprising that the camera didn't fix itself when you were all communing with it. That is actually very rude. Come on now, Bolex.
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