Omega View Recessed Lens Board
Material: Aluminum
Outside Dimensions: 6.25 x 6.25 inches
Recess Depth: 40.5 mm
Mounting Hole: 41.5 mm
Reorganizing my Calumet C1 8x10 stuff and I found this oddball item. I believe it came as part of yet another Never-To-Be-Mentioned-Online-Auction-Site purchase by me of a different recessed board that did correctly fit my C1. There are no dents or dings, and only a few very minor scuff marks.
I have no use for this. If you do, it's free for the asking. And if the cost of shipping to your address is US$5.00 or less, I'll just further appease the Photo Gods by also shipping it to you for free.*
Apologies for the crappy image. Don't own - and have never even used - a digital camera. This is a scan from an ancient HP scanner made by suspending the top edge of the board above the glass with string, then covering it with a sheet of white paper to create the gray background.
Ken
* In return I'm expecting some really cool compositions to spontaneously present themselves to me in the near future...
Last edited by Ken Nadvornick; 08-14-2010 at 11:41 AM. Click to view previous post history.
"The richness of the experience that occurs when one is exposed tangibly to a subject, material, or process is unmatchable in the abstract... Thus, when 'touch it,' 'taste it,' smell it' become the watchwords, the results are most often extraordinary. Equally extraordinary are the lengths to which people will go to avoid [that] experience."
— Tom Peters and Robert H. Waterman Jr., In Search of Excellence, 1982
"The richness of the experience that occurs when one is exposed tangibly to a subject, material, or process is unmatchable in the abstract... Thus, when 'touch it,' 'taste it,' smell it' become the watchwords, the results are most often extraordinary. Equally extraordinary are the lengths to which people will go to avoid [that] experience."
— Tom Peters and Robert H. Waterman Jr., In Search of Excellence, 1982
"The richness of the experience that occurs when one is exposed tangibly to a subject, material, or process is unmatchable in the abstract... Thus, when 'touch it,' 'taste it,' smell it' become the watchwords, the results are most often extraordinary. Equally extraordinary are the lengths to which people will go to avoid [that] experience."
— Tom Peters and Robert H. Waterman Jr., In Search of Excellence, 1982