posting photos?

Posted by: davidf on 03 July 2001

can someone tell me how to post photos. My brother in law is visiting with his digital camera and I took some nice photos of my system. We dragged the photos and created a folder which holds the photos. Now, how do you move the photos into a forum message? thanks, david.
Posted on: 05 July 2001 by Top Cat
Vuk, your comment could only apply where colour is concerned - B&W digital darkroom techniques are so far behind it's laughable. Tahra's a master printer, she's my woman, she said so, and she's never wrong, so it must be so wink

John

PS. I'd have so many more decent T-shirts were it not for the woes of the chemical darkroom and the 'brown splodge' effect smile

Posted on: 05 July 2001 by Rico
Nice to see you posting, Simon!

Ahh, the Digital vs Analogue debate still alive and well here - just morphing into another state/format.

I challenge you to do that with yer fingers in the chemicals, Vuk! wink

TC - the simplist solution is to not wear decent clobber in your darkroom.

Rico - all your base are belong to us.

Posted on: 06 July 2001 by Mike Hanson
This was already mentioned earlier in the thread, although you had to check out the link to realize what it was. Take a look at:

http://www.siliconfilm.com/

-=> Mike Hanson <=-

Posted on: 06 July 2001 by Steve B
If you want to see what some images taken with the world's best digital camera - the Hubble space telescope - check out this site.

null

The foreground images are of course false (but fascinating to me), but the backrounds are real images taken with the telescope.

Steve B

Posted on: 07 July 2001 by matthewr
>> your comment could only apply where colour is concerned - B&W digital darkroom techniques are so far behind it's laughable <<

How so? I'm not aware of anything you can do (in terms of technique) traditionally that you cannot do digitally.

For me digital cameras and darkrooms have gone well past the "obviously awful" stage so that the choice between trad and digital is almost irrelevant compared to the differences in the abilities of individual photographers.

Matthew