Beautiful Boudoir
60’s Boudoir Lighting Image
Mark Fisher American Photographer
This Image Is Sepia and Selenium Toned.
Something You Would Use
To Warm Up A Image.
Today, We Have Photo Shop.
Toners Were Poison
And Cause Cancer
As They Say.
In The 1960's
There were Studio Strobes.
There was A Split, In Opinion
Which Was Better.
The Strobes Gave You Hot Spots
And The Strobe Units Were Still
Using Tubes, Which Were Always Out Of Stock
If They Went Bad.
I used A System By
A Company Called Flash Master
Hey, even I was Shocked
By how Unstable The Units Were
I Was Knocked To The Floor
By Touching A Power Unit
That Was Not Properly Grounded.
That Was Another Reason
Hot Lights Were used.
They Did Caused Heavy Shadows
They Still Do, If Not Balanced And
The Heat Was One Of The Major Problems.
You Did Not Need A Flash Meter
For Hot Lights And
Was Another Reason.
I used Strobes Without A Meter
For Many Black And White Projects Until 1996...
With Great Results.
By Using Math And Walking
The Distance Between The Subject And Source.
Oh Yeah And The Mighty Polaroid
Was A Great Tool.
Most Cameras Had A Polaroid Back,
The Professional Camera And Medium Format, That Is.
Hey, Meters Were Unreliable.
Meters Broke Down To Many Times.
The Battery Was Always Hard To Find.
Hot Light Units Used Screw In Bulbs
Like, The Style For Household Use.
For Color They Were Balanced
With Tungsten For The Color Film.
Those Bulbs Would Burn Off The Coating
And Became Useless For Color Images.
That Bulb Change In The 1980's
But Heat Continued To Be A Problem.
Camera
Pentax 67
Film
Kodak
Vericrome Pan Film
Lighting
Hot Lights.
Title: 60’s Boudoir
Model In The Image: Tammy
Captured In My New York Studio.
Image © Mark Fisher NYC1
(All Rights Reserved)
To Contact Mark Fisher
E-Mail to; firststampmultimedia@yahoo.com
You Must E-Mail.
For Direct Contact.
Original Image By Mark Fisher NYC1
Rep: Green Key Management
212 . 874 . 73 . 73
Music Blog:
New Music Blog Up: http://markfishers-musicreview.blogspot.com/2010/07/mark-fishers-music-review-endemic.html
Face Book Page:
http://www.facebook.com/MarkFisherAmerican
To See Beauty Images
http://modelurl.com/MarkFisherNYC1/photos.aspx
More To Be Found On A Google Search
Mark Fisher NYC1 (Click Images)
Mark Fisher Beauty Photographer (Click Images)
(The Real Mark Fisher Photographer Is In New York)
New York Photographer Mark Fisher
Look For The Blogs.
To See More Images
Go To My Website…
If You Would Like!
Website; http://web.me.com/markfishernyc1
UNDER FEDERAL LAW, IF YOU KNOWINGLY MISREPRESENT OR PROMOTE ONLINE MATERIAL OR IDENTITY THAT IS INFRINGING, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO CRIMINAL PROSECUTION FOR PERJURY AND CIVIL PENALTIES, INCLUDING MONETARY DAMAGES, COURT COSTS, AND ATTORNEYS’ FEES.
Remember: Photographer Mark Fisher is in New York.
Thank You
∆
Mark Fisher American Photographer
This Image Is Sepia and Selenium Toned.
Something You Would Use
To Warm Up A Image.
Today, We Have Photo Shop.
Toners Were Poison
And Cause Cancer
As They Say.
In The 1960's
There were Studio Strobes.
There was A Split, In Opinion
Which Was Better.
The Strobes Gave You Hot Spots
And The Strobe Units Were Still
Using Tubes, Which Were Always Out Of Stock
If They Went Bad.
I used A System By
A Company Called Flash Master
Hey, even I was Shocked
By how Unstable The Units Were
I Was Knocked To The Floor
By Touching A Power Unit
That Was Not Properly Grounded.
That Was Another Reason
Hot Lights Were used.
They Did Caused Heavy Shadows
They Still Do, If Not Balanced And
The Heat Was One Of The Major Problems.
You Did Not Need A Flash Meter
For Hot Lights And
Was Another Reason.
I used Strobes Without A Meter
For Many Black And White Projects Until 1996...
With Great Results.
By Using Math And Walking
The Distance Between The Subject And Source.
Oh Yeah And The Mighty Polaroid
Was A Great Tool.
Most Cameras Had A Polaroid Back,
The Professional Camera And Medium Format, That Is.
Hey, Meters Were Unreliable.
Meters Broke Down To Many Times.
The Battery Was Always Hard To Find.
Hot Light Units Used Screw In Bulbs
Like, The Style For Household Use.
For Color They Were Balanced
With Tungsten For The Color Film.
Those Bulbs Would Burn Off The Coating
And Became Useless For Color Images.
That Bulb Change In The 1980's
But Heat Continued To Be A Problem.
Camera
Pentax 67
Film
Kodak
Vericrome Pan Film
Lighting
Hot Lights.
Title: 60’s Boudoir
Model In The Image: Tammy
Captured In My New York Studio.
Image © Mark Fisher NYC1
(All Rights Reserved)
To Contact Mark Fisher
E-Mail to; firststampmultimedia@yahoo.com
You Must E-Mail.
For Direct Contact.
Original Image By Mark Fisher NYC1
Rep: Green Key Management
212 . 874 . 73 . 73
Music Blog:
New Music Blog Up: http://markfishers-musicreview.blogspot.com/2010/07/mark-fishers-music-review-endemic.html
Face Book Page:
http://www.facebook.com/MarkFisherAmerican
To See Beauty Images
http://modelurl.com/MarkFisherNYC1/photos.aspx
More To Be Found On A Google Search
Mark Fisher NYC1 (Click Images)
Mark Fisher Beauty Photographer (Click Images)
(The Real Mark Fisher Photographer Is In New York)
New York Photographer Mark Fisher
Look For The Blogs.
To See More Images
Go To My Website…
If You Would Like!
Website; http://web.me.com/markfishernyc1
UNDER FEDERAL LAW, IF YOU KNOWINGLY MISREPRESENT OR PROMOTE ONLINE MATERIAL OR IDENTITY THAT IS INFRINGING, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO CRIMINAL PROSECUTION FOR PERJURY AND CIVIL PENALTIES, INCLUDING MONETARY DAMAGES, COURT COSTS, AND ATTORNEYS’ FEES.
Remember: Photographer Mark Fisher is in New York.
Thank You
∆
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