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Author
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Topic: O.Winston Link Recordings On Nationsal Recording Redistry
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Stephen Furley
Film God
Posts: 3059
From: Coulsdon, Croydon, England
Registered: May 2002
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posted 03-20-2004 04:50 PM
There's a poster print of one of his pictures hanging in a corridor at work, the one with the swimmers in the foreground, and a train passing in the distance.
I've got a fair number, about 70, 'Link sized' flashbulbs, the one in the Speed Graphic that I'm holding in my picture is somewhat smaller, but I've never dared to fire one. The biggest thing I've ever used is a No.5, and I still use the much smaller M3. M5 and AG1 bulbs.
I'm looking for something to try one of the large ones on; a large building maybe, or a small village!
Anybody here ever used flash powder?
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Stephen Furley
Film God
Posts: 3059
From: Coulsdon, Croydon, England
Registered: May 2002
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posted 03-22-2004 03:13 PM
That company is Meggaflash, they have a web site here .
There seem to have been three main series of flashbulb numberings:
GE - 5, 11, 22 etc.
Sylvania - Press 25, 0, 2, 3 etc.
Philips - PF1, PF5, PF14, PF25, PF60, PF100 etc.
Meggaflash took over part of the old Sylvania production line, and is making equivilant of three of it's bulbs, the 2, 3 and FF33, but have renumbered them PF200, PF300 and PF300.
All of these are the large, screw cap type. Meggaflash had intended to produce a smaller bulb, a completely new type, I think they were going to call it the PF50, it was a spherical bulb, about 50mm in diameter, but still with the screw cap, not the smaller bayonet one. I have a pre-production one in my collection, but they didn't put it into full production. As far as I know, no other company is making flashbulbs today, and therefore no smaller types are being made. The Meggaflash bulbs are very expensive, I buy my bulbs cheaply at camera fairs, or on Ebay. I don't use very many, and have enough to last the rest of my life, and to leave some for others after me.
Flashbulbs are still used by special effects people, and cave photographers amongst others, and the PF330 type, which burns for almost two seconds, is used for high speed cinematography, where a great deal of light is needed for a short period, for recording things like destructive testing.
Apart from about two thousand of smaller 'usable' bulbs, I've got quite a large collection of all types, foil filled, SF and SM type fast ones with no wire, long burn flat peak ones for focal plane shutters, yellow ones for tungesten film, black ones for infra red and a 'Sashalight' the first British-made bulb, not quite the worlds oldest, but almost as old. This had a small screw cap, the idea being that there weren't any flash guns then, you uses a torch (flashlight), took the front off it, screwed in the flashbulb in place of the normal torch bulb, looked away, pressed the switch and ... got showered in broken glass if the thing exploded. There was no lacquer coating, and no safety spot to show if any air had got in.
A book 'Photo-Flash', published by Focal Press, has a great picture af a market, lit by fifty one of the huge GE No. 75 bulbs.
Some of Frank Hurley's photographs of the Endurance trapped in the ice were taken by 'magnesum flares', acording to a book I have; I assume this must have been an early predecessor of flash.
I met an old photographer, who was still using flash powder for special purposes, as late as the late '40s, mainly for things like large banquet shots. He told me that he only got one shot, which filled the room with white smoke, so he couldn't try again if it went wrong, and he would beat a hasty retreat before the smoke particles started landing on posh suits and dresses!
In the right place the normally hated hard shadow of a single undiffused flash can produce dramatic resluts.
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