Vintage Nikon

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Vintage Nikon
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Vintage Nikon Nikkormat Film Camera & 50mm lens
Vintage Nikon Nikkormat Film Camera & 50mm lens
Paypal   US $155.00
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 01
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 01
Paypal   US $1.55
Vintage Nikon Nippon Kogaku 200mm Lens for Nikon F and Leather Case
Vintage Nikon Nippon Kogaku 200mm Lens for Nikon F and Leather Case
Paypal   US $115.00
Vintage Nikon F 35mm SLR Camera + 3 Lenes Original Boxes Filters Lots More
Vintage Nikon F 35mm SLR Camera + 3 Lenes Original Boxes Filters Lots More
Paypal   US $202.49
Vintage Cameras--Nikon-3 Kodaks-Olympus-ITT-Vivitar-Most are 35mm-7 NICE Cameras
Vintage Cameras--Nikon-3 Kodaks-Olympus-ITT-Vivitar-Most are 35mm-7 NICE Cameras
Paypal   US $46.95
Vintage NIKON FM  Camera, 35mm, 55mm & 500mm lens and motor
Vintage NIKON FM Camera, 35mm, 55mm & 500mm lens and motor
Paypal   US $149.99
Vintage 35mm Nikon Nikkormat Minolta Vivitar Telephoto Tamron Promaster Lenses
Vintage 35mm Nikon Nikkormat Minolta Vivitar Telephoto Tamron Promaster Lenses
Paypal   US $129.99
Vintage Leather Camera case for Nikon F
Vintage Leather Camera case for Nikon F
Paypal   US $45.00
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 10
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 10
Paypal   US $1.55
Handmade Vintage Camera Strap for DSLR EVIL Olympus Nikon Canon Sony Panasonic
Handmade Vintage Camera Strap for DSLR EVIL Olympus Nikon Canon Sony Panasonic
Paypal   US $25.99
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 02
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 02
Paypal   US $1.55
Vintage NIKON ZOOM-NIKKOR-C AUTO Lens1:45  f=80 200mm 170336 USED
Vintage NIKON ZOOM-NIKKOR-C AUTO Lens1:45 f=80 200mm 170336 USED
Paypal   US $9.99
Vintage Nikon Underwater Flash Unit for Nikonos, Uses Bulbs, Very Cool
Vintage Nikon Underwater Flash Unit for Nikonos, Uses Bulbs, Very Cool
Paypal   US $85.00
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 09
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 09
Paypal   US $1.55
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 02
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 02
Paypal   US $1.55
Vintage Canvas Canon Nikon Sony SLR DSLR Camera Shoulder Bags Handbag Army-Green
Vintage Canvas Canon Nikon Sony SLR DSLR Camera Shoulder Bags Handbag Army-Green
Paypal   US $44.77
Nikon RF S w/ Case & Accu-Rapid Wind #6104009 - Vintage
Nikon RF S w/ Case & Accu-Rapid Wind #6104009 - Vintage
Paypal   US $990.00
Vintage NIKON micro M2 RING 55mm f 3.5
Vintage NIKON micro M2 RING 55mm f 3.5
Paypal   US $24.95
Vintage NIKON
Vintage NIKON "WAIST-LEVEL FINDER FOR NIKON F" W/Leather Case & InstructionsNEW
Paypal   US $12.50
Vintage NIKON ACCESSORIES  (19)  & Camera CASE    COME LOOK!!!!
Vintage NIKON ACCESSORIES (19) & Camera CASE COME LOOK!!!!
Paypal   US $29.99
Vintage Nikon S2 Rangefinder Film Camera
Vintage Nikon S2 Rangefinder Film Camera
Paypal   US $1,500.00
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 01
VINTAGE STYLE DSLR SLR Camera Neck Shoulder Strap for Canon Nikon Sony Pentax 01
Paypal   US $1.55
Nikon Nikkor Vintage Leather Case for LTM 135mm Lens
Nikon Nikkor Vintage Leather Case for LTM 135mm Lens
Paypal   US $5.95
Vintage Digital SLR DSLR Camera Leather Shoulder Neck Strap for Nikon Sony Canon
Vintage Digital SLR DSLR Camera Leather Shoulder Neck Strap for Nikon Sony Canon
Paypal   US $.99
Vintage Digital SLR DSLR Camera Leather Shoulder Neck Strap for Nikon Sony Canon
Vintage Digital SLR DSLR Camera Leather Shoulder Neck Strap for Nikon Sony Canon
Paypal   US $.99
Vintage Nikon F Flash Coupler
Vintage Nikon F Flash Coupler
Paypal   US $25.00
Vintage Nikon FE 35mm SLR Camera With Nikkor Zoom Lens- EXTRA NICE
Vintage Nikon FE 35mm SLR Camera With Nikkor Zoom Lens- EXTRA NICE
Paypal   US $104.95
VINTAGE NIKON NIKKOR-TELE 1:4 85/48 NIPPON KOGAKU WITH CAPS IN CASE MINTY
VINTAGE NIKON NIKKOR-TELE 1:4 85/48 NIPPON KOGAKU WITH CAPS IN CASE MINTY
Paypal   US $49.99
CS4 Vintage Camera Strap For Nikon J1 P80 P90 P500 P510 L100 L110 L120 L310 L810
CS4 Vintage Camera Strap For Nikon J1 P80 P90 P500 P510 L100 L110 L120 L310 L810
Paypal   US $8.99
CS4 Vintage Camera Strap For Nikon D4 D800 D3000 D3100 D3200 D5000 D5100 D7000
CS4 Vintage Camera Strap For Nikon D4 D800 D3000 D3100 D3200 D5000 D5100 D7000
Paypal   US $8.99
Authentic Vintage Retro Hippie Camera Strap 70s 80s Film Photography Nikon Canon
Authentic Vintage Retro Hippie Camera Strap 70s 80s Film Photography Nikon Canon
Paypal   US $24.99
Nikon Nikomat FTn & Lens Japanese vintage camera
Nikon Nikomat FTn & Lens Japanese vintage camera
Paypal   US $80.00
NIKON VINTAGE WIDE STRAP WITH FILM HOLDER
NIKON VINTAGE WIDE STRAP WITH FILM HOLDER
Paypal   US $14.92
Vintage Nikon Nikkor F2 Camera Shutter Cable release AR-2
Vintage Nikon Nikkor F2 Camera Shutter Cable release AR-2
Paypal   US $25.00
Vintage Cameras Deal - Nikon - Pentax - Kodak
Vintage Cameras Deal - Nikon - Pentax - Kodak
Paypal   US $150.90
VINTAGE NIKON L35 AF  35MM CAMERA &TELEPHOTO & WIDE ANGLE LENS SET - ORIG BOX
VINTAGE NIKON L35 AF 35MM CAMERA &TELEPHOTO & WIDE ANGLE LENS SET - ORIG BOX
Paypal   US $55.00
Vintage spectrum promaster lens 55mm - good condition-canon/nikon
Vintage spectrum promaster lens 55mm - good condition-canon/nikon
Paypal   US $50.00
VINTAGE NIKON F PROTOMIC FT  CAMERA WITH STAR D 2.8  135MM LENS
VINTAGE NIKON F PROTOMIC FT CAMERA WITH STAR D 2.8 135MM LENS
Paypal   US $165.00
Nikon Zoom Touch 500s 35-80mm Camera, Vintage
Nikon Zoom Touch 500s 35-80mm Camera, Vintage
Paypal   US $13.99
Nikon N65 35mm SLR Film Camera with vintage Nikon bag, Tamron 28-200mm lens, +++
Nikon N65 35mm SLR Film Camera with vintage Nikon bag, Tamron 28-200mm lens, +++
Paypal   US $100.00
**VINTAGE** NIKON F 35mm CAMERA W/ LENSES & FLASH
**VINTAGE** NIKON F 35mm CAMERA W/ LENSES & FLASH
Paypal   US $32.00
Vintage Nikon EM 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only
Vintage Nikon EM 35mm SLR Film Camera Body Only
Paypal   US $19.00
VINTAGE NIKON F PROTOMIC FT  CAMERA WITH VIVITAR ZOOM55-135
VINTAGE NIKON F PROTOMIC FT CAMERA WITH VIVITAR ZOOM55-135
Paypal   US $165.00
Vintage Nikon 7x35 Wide Field Binoculars with Case
Vintage Nikon 7x35 Wide Field Binoculars with Case
Paypal   US $5.50
VINTAGE NIKON F CAMERA MANUAL (VERY GOOD CONDITION)
VINTAGE NIKON F CAMERA MANUAL (VERY GOOD CONDITION)
Paypal   US $29.99
Vintage Nikon Nikkor-H 50mm f2 lens
Vintage Nikon Nikkor-H 50mm f2 lens
Paypal   US $19.00
VINTAGE NIKON F CAMERA GUIDE
VINTAGE NIKON F CAMERA GUIDE
Paypal   US $29.99
Nikon F2 w/ 50mm f/1.4 nikkor-S & DP-1 Viewfinder/meter Vintage SLR film camera
Nikon F2 w/ 50mm f/1.4 nikkor-S & DP-1 Viewfinder/meter Vintage SLR film camera
Paypal   US $400.00
Nikon camera polarizing filter 52mm Vintage NIB screw-in mount
Nikon camera polarizing filter 52mm Vintage NIB screw-in mount
Paypal   US $13.00
Vintage IMADO 28mm wide angle lens - fits Nikon F mount
Vintage IMADO 28mm wide angle lens - fits Nikon F mount
Paypal   US $19.00
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Here are some more information for Vintage Nikon:
Vintage Nikon

OK, so now that you have bought yourself a camera (reasonably good, I suppose!), you might be wondering how to take great photographs that you get to see in movies or in the Internet. I'm sure some really awesome pictures are going on in your mind and you trying to create one of them yourself.

Fine, so you go ahead and start shooting pictures with the new found status of the "Photographer" among your circle of friends. And this feeling is directly proportional to the amount you have invested in buying the camera. Before long, you start believing that you really know about photography, till your first set of photographs are out.

Alas! reality dawns and you are suddenly, well not the choicest of photographers around. You discover that you are not the photographer you thought you were and the photos you have taken are far from the professional pics you like. Well the first blame definitely goes to the camera, which somehow is not the one you wanted and/or the 'situation' you had to take photographs, you didn't get enough time blah blah......

So, can we just stop blaming and start working, folks. Well let's analyse the photographer in U. Sit back and honestly say whether you have considered the following (I'll try avoid the jargon and Keep it Simple)

What did you want to photograph?

Why did you want to photograph that?

Did it have enough interesting 'subject'?

Was the light enough?

Did you allow the feedback from your camera?

If you have read till here, either you are lost by now or you have started realizing what I'm trying to hint. Either way, let me try to help you out.

Photography isn't about photocopying (For God's sake!). This is an art where, to put it simply, u paint with light. To take an example, don't use a camera as a tool to capture evidence (We were here!). Rather ask yourself how differently can u take a pic of where you or your family have been. Let's say you have gone to the mountains for a sunset. Don't just photograph the setting sun (anybody will do that I think) take pics of the impact of the setting sun rays on the surroundings. Maybe try a silhouette. Capture some interesting frames where the viewer can see the setting sun rays through a tree bark or arches of the mountain. This kind of pictures will not only add interest to your photograph it will make it more complete than your dark face in front of the camera lens.

Often a mistake which we do (I also did this mistake) we don't wait to see what the camera got to offer in the given circumstances. How is it taking light in, what clarity is providing at what settings (I'll go into the details of settings in some future article) and most importantly what changes do I have to do capture the mood.

Well, this brings me to an interesting topic (and I'll keep it short ) the mood of a photograph. You can make someone laugh, cry or do anything you want by just a small photograph (now, that's the power of the art). Try adding few kids in playful scenario and take a candid snap, or throw some soft toys at your puppy and photograph that moment. If you are walking down a country road just after the rains have stopped (accidentally you were carrying the camera with you) look around and you can tell me if you dint find that droplets on green shiny leaves or wide vistas of moist look and feel with a hut here or there.

To sum it up, your photograph should have a meaning behind each pic and not just assembled piece of evidence. A sense of purpose and an ability to stand out of the crowd (choose that uncommon angle, capture the vintage car passing by) will bring out the true photographer in you. Ok, before I sign off, here's a small challenge that I would like to throw at you. Try shooting extraordinary pics out of ordinary day to day moments and send me the story behind the photograph (trust me this really brings the photograph to life) and those photographs will become the subject of my next blog. Till then... Goodbye and happy photographing!

Visit http://www.digitalphotographyhelp.com/ for more insightful yet easy articles on tips and tricks of digital photography for everybody. The author is a photo enthusiast and welcomes your comments, articles, views on this article. The author can be reached at support@digitalphotographyhelp.com.

Interview with Lanny Ziering, CEO of SuperStock

John: Lanny, I know you as one of the founders of Blend Images. Now you are CEO of SuperStock. Can you share with us a little of your background and how you came to be SuperStock’s CEO?

Lanny: Well, it’s sort of a kidnapped-by-aliens story. I picked up my first camera when I was about 8 or 9 and pretty much had one in my hand all the way thru high school. I was the photo editor of my high school yearbook and determined to go to Art Center, but I kept looking at pictures taken by guys like Irving Penn, Richard Avedon and David Bailey. The more I looked, the more I thought my own pictures were total crap and would never get better. So, I sold my enlarger and my Nikon F, gave up all hope of ever meeting Jean Shrimpton, and went to UCLA where I eventually got an MBA.

After B-school I had a bunch jobs of including working at MTV right after it launched. Eventually, I went to work at a TV station in LA as the program director. Here’s the part where the aliens kidnap me and I spend 7 years working at PricewaterhouseCoopers in global consulting projects for energy companies and long distance carriers. Fast forward to 2002: IBM buys the consulting business of PricewaterhouseCoopers. I was either pushed or I jumped (depending on who you believe) and before hitting the ground I decided that I wanted to turn back the clock to the summer I graduated from high school.

I couldn’t do much about all my gray hair but I decided to pursue a career in photography. Looking back, it seems like a totally insane notion. However, something very odd happened. A friend producing short programs for a cable network, Fine Living, hired me to shoot stills and we used Avid editing software to animate the stills in a Ken Burns sort of way. I bought a new Canon D60 and never looked back. It wasn’t long before I met Lawrence Manning, a very talented stock photographer. We partnered on a bunch of stock shoots and pretty soon royalty checks started arriving in the mail.

Long story short, I went with Lawrence and Beautiful Betty (Mallorca) to a little meeting of about 30 stock shooters in Las Vegas. Blend was born at that meeting and Rick Becker-Leckrone asked me to help with the formation of the company. I spent the next four and a half years working with Rick to realize his vision. Then we started to wonder, “What do we do next?” A small group of us started kicking ideas around at the NY PACA meeting and Gustavo Baez tossed out the idea, why not buy Superstock?

Why not, indeed. Alan Bailey (from Rubberball) and I flew down to Jacksonville. We woke up from the dream walking out of Federal bankruptcy court having out bid Steve Pigeon for Superstock. In a bloodless ceremony I was anointed Superstock’s new CEO. It was all a bit unreal. In the finest tradition of the stock business we all went out to dinner that night with Steve, drank a lot of wine, and agreed to distribute each other’s content. Is this a great industry or what?

John:  SuperStock was purchased in Bankruptcy court. Can you fill us in on the ramifications of what SuperStock has been through and how that will affect it’s photographers and clients?

Lanny: Superstock has been through a trauma. The employees are an amazing bunch and, despite what they have been through, they continue to believe in the company. Virtually every photographer, client, image partner and distributor decided to keep doing business with Superstock.

Ownership of the company is back in the hands of photographers and and Morgan Stanley and the financiers are gone. Superstock is once again a place that is about the photographic image and those who create those images and those who use those images to communicate.

John:  What do you think are the strengths of SuperStock?

Lanny: Superstock has three essential strengths. First, hundreds of contributing photographers around the world who supply images to us. This has produced an extraordinary collection of fine art, vintage, travel and scenic, and contemporary imagery. Second, a large base of loyal clients in publishing and advertising. Third, a very talented staff that works every day to bring photographers and clients together.

John:  What are SuperStock’s areas of vulnerability?

Lanny: I could tell you but then I’d have to kill you.

John:  What is your vision for where you want to take SuperStock?

Our plan for Superstock is pretty straightforward. We are stabilizing the company so we keep the content, clients and staff that make Superstock a great agency. We’ve pretty much completed this phase. Now we’re optimizing the company’s image assets and relationships.

It’s no secret that the Superstock was not very well led in the last few years and there’s a lot we are doing to get more images to market and make it easier for clients to find the images they need. We’re going to compete by continuing to offer clients a unique collection of fine art, vintage, travel, and contemporary imagery along with a deep understanding of how those images are used.

John:  Do you have any plans to incorporate Micro stock into your mix?

Lanny: We’re looking at many options but I don’t think Micro will be the first thing we do.

John:  Do you see potential in expanding stock sales beyond the traditional buyers of stock?

Lanny: Consumers are the Holy Grail, I suppose. Consumers seem to have a never-ending fascination with celebrities, so there will undoubtedly be new ways to download shots of Miley, Madonna, Rihanna, and next week’s it girl. I can also envision consumers who would enjoy looking at images of fine art, distant locations, and historical events. This is where we’ll be well positioned to serve that market.

John:  There is a lot of buzz in the photographic community about the lack of concern large agencies have for the individual photographer. Is the economic viability of the individual photographer important to SuperStock? Should it be important to agencies?

Lanny: I can’t speak for other agencies, but Superstock places great value on the individual photographer. After all, the owners of Superstock are photographers. It’s in our DNA. Blend has certainly proven that an agency can succeed by caring about the success of photographers. We can’t succeed unless our photographers succeed. So we’re creating a very close relationship between our sales people who talk to picture buyers every day and our editors who talk to photographers so they will know the subjects that will sell.

John:  Agencies like Getty are constantly reducing the human interaction with photographers as well as clients. Is that something that is inevitable and necessary, even for SuperStock?

Lanny: We think a lot about how to increase the interaction between our editors and our photographers.

John:  One of SuperStock’s offerings is subscription. Can the subscription model work for photographers as well as agencies?

Lanny: Different clients have different ways they like to buy pictures. Some have no problem paying $20,000 for the perfect image to go on a can of beans and others need to download a hundred images a day to put in a blog for butterfly collectors. Photographers and agencies need to find ways to make money from either type of client.

John:  I am under the impression that the market for stock images is moving away from print and more into the internet as the print world shrinks and the online world increases. Is my impression accurate? If so, does this present a problem in the lower prices charged for internet use?

Lanny: True, there is a shift from paper to pixels. I think it is too early to precisely predict the future shape of the internet market for images. Right now internet audiences are pretty fragmented but as they become more concentrated there may be an opportunity to charge more for compelling images.

On the other hand, the nature of print and the internet are different. A powerful image is probably the key thing to attract a customer to buy a magazine or to stop and look at an ad on a page. But internet browsing is ironically less visual and more text driven than print so images may not have quite the magnetic power (or economic value) they do in print.

John:  Along those lines, do you think the pricing structure of RF stock images, and I suppose Micro, needs to change? Do you think it will change?

Lanny: Pricing is alchemy. Get it right and you turn lead into gold. Get it wrong and you turn gold into lead. Nominal RF prices might look like they are rising, but there’s a lot of evidence that overall RF prices are falling (dare I say the words “Premium Access”?). At the same time prices are rising in the micro space. Macro and micro appear to be converging but prices won’t ever meet. Certainly, the 1 to 100-price ratio of two years ago will continue to shrink.

John:  Does the increasing use of video threaten the market for still Images?

Lanny: Video will grow, that is inevitable. But there is nothing that has the power of a still image. My generation was shaped by TV, but every major event in our lifetime is defined by a still image. When people think of the Vietnam War they think about the image of the man being shot in the head by the guy in the short sleeve shirt or the napalm-scarred girl running down the road.

When we think of the student revolution on Tiananmen Square it’s the image of the guy with the plastic shopping bags in front of the tank. I believe it was actually shot in video but we remember it as a single frame. And the defining image of Barack Obama is that stolen shot used in the “Hope” poster. I don’t think anything will ever replace the way a still image allows us to do what life denies us: stop time.

John:  Do you see SuperStock offering video?

Lanny: Yes.

John:  Some are predicting a radically different world of stock images in as little as five years. Do you see any big changes on the horizon?

Lanny: One thing is for sure: search doesn’t work very well for anybody so look for innovations in how agencies enable clients to search for images. I’d also expect a convergence between stills and footage, perhaps packages for integrated campaigns.

John:  Do you have any advice for the veteran stock shooter?

Lanny: Talk to people who buy pictures, find out what they want, go and shoot it.

John:  Do you have any advice for photographers who are just entering the field of stock photography?

Lanny: As William Goldman said about the movie business, “nobody knows nothing”. Learn everything you can about photography and advertising and journalism and publishing and then let it all go and listen to your instincts.

About the Author

Visit John’s website for unique and interesting concept stock photos: Lifestyle Ethnic People

Visit John Lund’s Photography Blog: Stock Photo Guy

How do you make photos look "vintage" (WITH NO EDITING) by using a Nikon D40?

For example, how do you make them look like some of the contrasted photos on this website: www.hellogoodbye.net (the official HelloGoodbye band website.)

Where the background is a bit yellowish, (not sepia!) or brownish and everything looks sharp and contrasted. Can that be done with the D40? Please state the steps clearly on how to do this.

Straight out f the camera, it isn't going to happen the way you want. You can play around with the white balance to make it a bit warmer (more red) and you can use different lighting such as mercury vapor (street lights) to get closer to what you want.

Another thing you can do is get some color filters and try to mix effects.

For special effects you really should get used to using good image editing software. "Gimp" is pretty good and it's free.

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