
First things first, here's a photo of Sarah, the Polish Elkhound, early on Saturday morning when she was just waiting for us to get moving and give her and Simon their breakfast. Her priorities are usually quite clear. I'm well pleased with the little Kodak. It does very well for the price. This was taken only with dawn light coming through the north facing window, no flash, handheld camera, set to imitate a high speed ISO 1600 film.
Today Gary and I went with
casey382 (Who is quickcasey on LJ) and rrwolf (see LJ also) to a show put on by the Rock River Valley Division of the National Model Railroad Association. I've been to a couple of other model railroad shows but this was the largest and most diverse I can remember. I took the opportunity to give my new camera some testing, with closeups of tiny (N gauge) trains in motion, and it did quite well in my opinion. I need to sift through the images before posting any, but I'll get some up in a day or two. N gauge models are quite small compared to the model trains of my childhood, something like 13 feet to the inch or so (160:1) which makes it possible for the models and scenery to be much better proportioned and for the trains to move at a reasonable speed in real time without seeming to move much too fast in relation to the scenery. You still need a lot of space for a realistically proportioned exhibit, but it's within attainability with one scale mile fitting into 35 feet or so of real space. Of course, even more than it was when I was a kid, this is a pretty expensive hobby. Locomotives appear to run from $60 to several hundred dollars, and you need track, control modules, and rolling stock as well. The realism you could attain, though, is amazingly close to Hollywood miniature quality. I'll be looking forward to the opportunity to photograph more of these tiny trains in appropriately scaled settings.
Afterward we had lunch in Belvidere and went back to the house where Casey gave us a demonstration of a t-trak (
http://t-trak.org) modular setup of N gauge track, putting together a running loop on our dining room table top in just a few minutes. Track and scenery are assembled in interchangeable wooden modules about a foot long. I had seen these in operation before, but had not seen the assembly or dismantling processes. It's impressively fast and easy.
All said, it was a fun way to spend a day, with good company and doing something different.
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Date: 2010-03-30 04:57 pm (UTC)Photography, on the other hoof, has grown much simpler what with digital cameras and computer based "darkroom" procedures. You don't need a darkroom with messy expensive chemicals, supplies and equipment and you don't have to pay large amounts of money for film and processing. That's why sites like Flickr and all those Twitter-connected photo archives are growing so fast.