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Former and current brands are included in this list. With some of the brands, the name is licensed from another company, or acquired after the bankruptcy of an older photographic equipment company. The actual manufacture of a camera model is performed by a different company in many cases. In many cases brands are limited to certain countries.
The name is derived from the Kentmere based photographic paper brand acquired by Ilford in 2007 and the films are particularly aimed at the student market and those new to black and white photography, due to their lower cost and 'forgiving' exposure latitude. Film names and packaging were revised in 2018. [108]
Free registration service, also provides services for Costco's online photo processing store. 90,000,000 [26] unlimited, pay per download Unsplash: Montreal, Quebec / Unsplash, Inc. [27] Free, registration required to upload pictures. Unsplash license only. It's similar to CC0, but the user can't use the pictures to replicate a similar or ...
Billy Name (1940–2016) Arnold Newman (1918–2006) Marvin E. Newman (1927–2023) Lora Webb Nichols (1883–1962) Nicholas Nixon (born 1947) James B. Norman (born 1952) Zak Noyle (born 1985) Lee Nye (1926–1999) Pipo Nguyen-duy (born 1962) Nic Nicosia (born 1951) Michael O'Brien (born 1950) Catherine Opie (born 1961) Charles O'Rear (born ...
Fenton's pictures during the Crimean War were one of the first cases of war photography, with Valley of the Shadow of Death considered "the most eloquent metaphor of warfare" by The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. [13] [14] [s 3] Sergeant Dawson and his Daughter: 1855 Unknown; attributed to John Jabez Edwin Mayall [15] Unknown [e]
AP Photo Industries (Spain) Darkroom equipment, film cartridges and cartridge loading equipment, disposable cameras [13] Beseler (USA) Photographic enlargers; De Vere (UK) Digital enlargers. Previous manufacturer of quality analog photographic enlargers. Dunco, Photographic enlargers; Jobo (US) Film/Photo processors; Fujifilm (Japan) Frontier ...
In the US, size names are often denoted with a code of the format nR, where the number n represents the length of the shorter edge in inches. In the normal series, the long edge is the length of the short edge plus 2 inches (10 in or less) or 3 inches (11 in and above).
The pictures served their purpose, but the resulting painting- a traditional, formal, bust-length portrait in an oval format—is not particularly distinguished and hardly remembered today. Gardner's surprisingly candid photographs have proven more enduring, even though they were not originally intended to stand alone as works of art. [122]