January 1, 2021
#411
Gentle reader,
Happy New Year! Which is not something that means a lot to me, at my age, 64, it basically means time for a new calendar. Yes, we still use paper calendars. Well, I do. Nancy has a smart phone, so she has it right there, I'm sure my Sonim XP3 military grade flip phone has that ability as well, but have never checked.
But I digress, another thing I'm good at. I do have some OCD tendencies, but I use my power for good.
Once I realized one could stream YouTube on the big screen, well, 42 inches is big to us, I start my day with it and watch it other times as well. Why people can be so content to stare, bent over, watching a phone screen, I'll never understand.
Anyway, (I digressed again) just before sitting down to do this article, I watched Sarah-n-Tuned latest end-of-the-year video. She let slip that she is 35. Many a single male (and no doubt female) viewer was curious about that:
That's What She Said! // 2020 Bloopers & Deleted Scenes - YouTube
She really is a remarkable young woman with great talent and perseverance.
BACK to the task at hand, the title states that this is the third in the series about my overhauling the look of the room we call "the office" in our humble home. Here are links to the two previous chapters:
The Robb Collections: Moving My Large Scale Diecast Car Collections And Rethinking The Room
THIS one has little to do with cars, which have been one of my passions for all my life.
After "finishing" the room's walls the last time, I still had to do something with the collected toys, and still carded diecast cars as well as a few framed items I had initially boxed.
That being said, I currently have a Nikon DSLR, a D300, and the two Panasonic LUMIX cameras shown above. I just counted the LUMIX cameras I sold, there were sixteen of them, including four Micro Four Thirds interchangeable lens mirrorless cameras. So, a total of eighteen LUMIX models. Plus two, (three actually) Fujifilm digital models, both bought for me by Nancy.
She surprised me with a Fujifilm digital camera a 1.3megapixel basic model so I could add photos to my eBay auctions, so it must have been 1998 or 99. The second one she gave me a few years later, my first "Bridge" camera, was a S7000 which was replaced under warranty by Fujifilm. Previous Nikon models were a D70S and D200.
So, you can probably tell, having the latest and greatest is not my thing. My car is sixteen years old and I hope to keep it forever. It's rare and perfect for me.
So, to show you what the room looked like in an earlier attempt to neaten it up, here is a years earlier article I wrote about it:
The Robb Collections: The OFFICE a virtual tour
Of the bookshelves then, only the low one with diecast cars in it's top compartment remain. The desk, chair and walnut cabinet I built in the 1970's and the shelf right inside the door are still in the same position, but their contents have changed.
Since I imagine that you cannot see the difference with the wall above, and the way it looked in the previous chapter, so I will tell you what they are. I moved the item which is now behind the right speaker from the side wall. I also framed and added the amazing print of a PENCIL drawing of a Porsche 924 made by Alfredo Toffaneli. The one and probably only Porsche we have owned was a 924S model.
I also made some extension mounts for the two Smith-Victor ten inch photography lights which brings them down a foot from the ceiling. Which is what those two things hanging from the ceiling with round white things on them are.
Please let me know if these images seem too DARK, when I
edited them my usual way, then viewed them in the photo viewer, they were
dark, so I lightened them some.
Unlike rear-mount (that's what she said!) teleconverter lenses (above) which mount TO the camera body and the lens is mounted to IT, front mount auxiliary lenses do not reduce light to the film or sensor. That and their ease of use and fairly good results are the positives about them.
Back to the room. Remember, that is what I'm writing about? As I mentioned I still had to do something with the toys and a few other things. SO, I will show you the room step-by-step starting with that same wall and the doorway which is to the LEFT of the first photo below, and walk you around the room from there.
Standing in the same location, but now facing the side wall of the house. I added some smaller framed photos and all of the carded diecast cars.
This is the cabinet/shelf I mentioned before. I made it from white walnut wood (the kind which yield the walnuts we eat) back in the 1970's with the tutelage of my girlfriend's father. The tree was on his property in Mutton Hollow, Virginia. The tree had died, so he had it felled and sawn into boards.
A couple of smaller pieces had these worm holes in them, so I made this one front and center.
We, like countless millions, loved the Toy Story series of films. The hat less Woody was a recent thrift store find. You may have noticed Buzz Lightyear and a Buddy Lee action figure to the right of this cabinet top in an earlier photo. There voices still work as does Buzz's Karate-chop action and "laser".
I loved cowboy films and TV shows, especially Roy Rogers. Although my young mind wondered why there were CARS in the shows.
The optional telephoto lens requires a special adapter tube which screws into the camera body around the lens.
Here is the results standing where I am now sitting. I cropped it to a square. Sharp lens? No, but one gets what one pays for.
Boxes for the two lenses. Optika does make a much better fisheye lens but it's more than ten times the price. For more on fisheye lenses, see here:
It may be me, but this image looks a little better. The Summilux lens is superior to the Elmar lens on the FZ200.
Now, some shots out the window, and I know shooting through two panes of glass and a screen is not going to yield clear results. But it's cold outside and being retired, I am spoiled.
This is the results of the Tokina lens. It is difficult to handhold long lenses regardless of size, shape or weight. So, this 1800mm equivalent shot is quite poor.
These shots are with the LX7 camera. Above is at 90mm equivalent. You can see reflections of the solar toys in the glass.
Lastly, the Tokina 3X mounted on the LX7. similar results, at 370mm equivalent focal length. Vignetting and soft edges have convinced me that the Tokina needs to go back on eBay and the Opteka fisheye is a "fun" effects lens at best.
This article ran a lot longer than I intended. But it was fun to shoot and write.
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