![]() ![]() Simply add to chart, check out and you’ll receive an email from e-junkie instantly with link to download:ġ87 MP Lumix S1R High Resolution Mode (930MB) June 9, 2019, the world premiere of Part 1 of Thorsten Overgaard’s Panasonic Lumix S1R hands-on review: "Why it is, and how it is", on the Magic of Light TV channel, YouTube. Panasonic Lumix DC S1R with Leica 80mm Summilux-R f/1.4. With an interchangeable bayonet that allows any lens to be added to it, either directly via L-mount or via an adapter, the Panasonic Lumix S1R is the perfect toy to explore. The details, quality, resolution and the 3D pop of it all has opened my eyes to the fact that maybe the last word hasn't been said, and the last detail hasn't been revealed as far as what a true Leica lens can capture. The Leica Q2, which came out at the same time, was the first Leica with a 47MP sensor behind a true Leica lens (but with a fixed 28mm f/1.7 lens). My initial interest in the Panasonic Lumix S1R was to get a preview of the Leica SL2 to get a taste of how a Leica lens will perform when put in front of a 47MP full-frame sensor. I found the Panasonic Lumix S1R to be a very serious camera, built for any professional assignment, but having too many buttons and features to make it a real extension of my viewpoint. ![]() Leica Digital Camera Reviews by Thorsten Overgaard Index of Thorsten Overgaard's user review pages on Leica M9, Leica M9-P, Leica M-E, Leica M9 Monochrom, Leica M10, Leica M10-P, Leica M10-D, Leica M10-R, Leica M10 Monohcrom, Leica M11, Leica M 240, Leica M-D 262, Leica M Monochrom 246, Leica SL, Leica SL2, Leica SL2-S, as well as Leica TL2, Leica CL, Leica Q, Leica Q2 and Leica Q2 Monochrom: The results are truly out of this world.The Panasonic Lumix S1R Mirrorless Camera Reviewīy: Thorsten Overgaard. Take Slow Factory boutique founder Celine Semaan Vernon, who transforms high-resolution NASA images of Earth into printed silk scarves, or Nervous System, the design studio behind the 3-D printed dress. With a Space X rocket launch scheduled for today, a new Space Age is taking off, bringing its attendant fashion inspiration: Gucci’s Fall 2014 ready-to-wear show paired mod shifts with patent-leather boots, while Rodarte presented a Star Wars-themed collection. Christian Dior’s Spring 2015 couture show included retro astronaut jumpsuits. But these nostalgic trips back to the future may prove to be less influential than fashions created with the same new technologies used by the current generation of space scientists. Rabanne dressed Hardy, as well, plus Audrey Hepburn, Brigitte Bardot, and Elizabeth Taylor. According to the New York Times, Courrèges’ “direct, unencumbered clothes” were intended to be worn by “young, fast-moving beauties” his clients included French pop star Françoise Hardy, socialite Lee Radziwill, and model Marisa Berenson. These white plastic sunglasses with narrow horizontal slits suggest protective goggles–or the bulging eyes of an otherworldly being. Museum Purchase, Funds provided by Robert Nelson As Cardin explained: “The clothes I prefer are those I invent for a life that doesn’t exist yet-the world of tomorrow.”ġ980s (based on style introduced in 1965) Science fiction films like 2001 and Barbarella (costumed by Rabanne) and TV shows like Space: 1999 (costumed by Rudi Gernreich) imagined a utopian future of tunics, trousers, flat booties, helmets, and mini-dresses in lunar white or bold geometric patterns. Museum Purchase, Funds provided by Tonian Hohberg These sleek, minimalist, and, often, unisex garments in high-tech synthetic fabrics turned women into chic astronauts and groovy aliens. In the early 1960s, in the throes of the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union, French couture designers like Pierre Cardin, Andre Courrèges, and Paco Rabanne sent so-called “Space Age” fashions down the Paris runways. This post from 2014 explores how the fascination with space exploration and the moon landing was reflected through the clothes people wore in the 1960s and beyond. Currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Pierre Cardin: Future Fashion reminds us of the noteworthy “futuristic” fashion in our collection.
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