Royal Mail
Telephone Kiosks in Wells (People)
Christian Malford Communications Centre
E II R
Communication Ancient & Modern
The Next Collection is on Wed
Deliveries
Monday. Been Collected
Things That Are Not Digital
Letterbox on the Corner
Red Gables Letter Box
Royal Mail
Mount Pleasant Post Box
Another Day, Another Picture of the Post Box
Raindrops
Post Box with Ivy
GR
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Different Shades of Red
Argyle Street from Laura Place
Letterbox, Tytherton Kellaways
Gates, Fences, Railings
An English Village
Street Furniture
Reyview
Simply Red
VR Postbox at Reybridge, Wiltshire
Post-Box
Two Red Communication Devices
Two Slots
Stamped Mail
Photographed on Thursday
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43 visits
Mount Pleasant, Bradford on Avon
Communication Ancient & Modern.
Even when I owned a better camera than the Nikon D50 I continued to use the lesser of the two. It was light in weight and I didn't fret over what might happen to it - they were easily replaced at little cost on the secondhand market. Nothing ever did happen to it, though. It was quite a sturdy instrument.
The pictures it made had good colour characteristics. People ascribe this to its CCD sensor. That type of sensor had been superseded by CMOS technology which initially produced a flatter, slightly clinical, sort of picture. I rather liked what came out of the D50 and years later bought a very inexpensive D40 which was specified with the same CCD sensor. Manufacturers preferred CMOS largely because it was cheaper to produce and it seemed to take some years before CMOS technology had a bit of photographic soul about it. Some might argue that it's still inferior.
The photo was taken with a Nikkor 24mm f/2.8 AF lens, which behaved like a 35mm focal length on the crop sensor of the D50.
Even when I owned a better camera than the Nikon D50 I continued to use the lesser of the two. It was light in weight and I didn't fret over what might happen to it - they were easily replaced at little cost on the secondhand market. Nothing ever did happen to it, though. It was quite a sturdy instrument.
The pictures it made had good colour characteristics. People ascribe this to its CCD sensor. That type of sensor had been superseded by CMOS technology which initially produced a flatter, slightly clinical, sort of picture. I rather liked what came out of the D50 and years later bought a very inexpensive D40 which was specified with the same CCD sensor. Manufacturers preferred CMOS largely because it was cheaper to produce and it seemed to take some years before CMOS technology had a bit of photographic soul about it. Some might argue that it's still inferior.
The photo was taken with a Nikkor 24mm f/2.8 AF lens, which behaved like a 35mm focal length on the crop sensor of the D50.
John FitzGerald, tiabunna, Fred Fouarge have particularly liked this photo
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