All Through a Lens: A Podcast About Film Photography
Arts:Visual Arts
Shownotes and photos here: allthroughalens.com
It’s another odd show, and we’re actually changing things up again! For most of the show we’ll be talking to Liz Potter (@lizpotterphotography on IG) and Amy Elizabeth (@itsamyliz on IG) about the Fallacy of the Sunk Cost Fallacy and why you shouldn’t just give up on a project.
We’ll have our regular banter, but Eric will also tell you a little about the first photos taken of the entire Earth – it’s both earlier and later than you think.
Amy’s article, “The Fallacy of Sunk-Cost Fallacy” is available here: https://www.itsamyliz.com/journal/the-fallacy-of-sunk-cost-fallacy
Amy’s website: itsamyliz.com
Liz’s website: lizpotterphotography.com
Eric references the book Through Astronaut Eyes; Photographing Early Human Spaceflight by Jennifer K. Levasseur. Link.
1946. First image of Earth from outer space, taken by the V-2 No. 13 suborbital spaceflight.1947. First panorama of Earth from outer space. V-2 rocket.On October 5, 1954, an NRL-launched Viking rocket carrying a movie camera captured the first high-altitude images of a tropical storm over the Gulf of Mexico, sparking the interest of the U.S. Weather Bureau and the future of high-altitude weather reconnaissance. This mosaic is a compilation of images captured from an altitude of 100 miles above the Earth surface. [Released 11-1226-3531]. Also listed as file number 60834 (H-517).1961. First image of Earth from space taken by a person, first color images and first movie of Earth from space, by cosmonaut Gherman Titov – the first photographer from space.1966. First full-disk pictures of the Earth from a geostationary orbit. Taken by the ATS-1.1967. First full-disk “true color picture of the Earth; subsequently used on the cover of the first Whole Earth Catalog.1968. First full-disk image of Earth from space taken by a person, probably by astronaut William Anders.1968. The Earthrise image is the first color image of Earth from the Moon by a person (William Anders).1972. Blue Marble. The last photo of the entire earth taken by a human (Apollo 17 Crew)PATREON
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THE CREDITS OF ENDINGwww.allthroughalens.com
Vania: IG, Flickr, Zines
Eric: IG, Flickr, Zines, ECN-2 Kit
Dev Party – Don’t Talk To Me Before I’ve Had My Caffenol!
Kodak Girls and a Photographic Revolution (w/ Angel O’Brien) - Episode 56
Dev Party – Spilling the Tea with Cyanotypes
Through Magpies and Song: Listening to Images (w/ Jordan Tiberio) - Episode 55
Dev Party – A Crash Course in Remjet Surgery
Dev Party - X-Ray in the Tickle Tent (Again-ish)
We’re Still Not Back, But Here We Are
Dev Party - Technically Technical Almost Panchromatic
It’s the End of the Year As We Know It (And We’re On Break)
Dev Party - Pulling Not Pushing
Disposable Cameras and Their Permanence (w/ Jenny Sampson)
Dev Party - Encouraging Casual Conversation (while Developing)
Murder vs. Death: Books of Crime Scene Photos (w/ Jon Hilty)
Dev Party - The Great Exchange
Kodak‘s New Prices and How We‘re Never Happy
Nailed to the Xtol (or Maybe Exel)
Carte de Vistas: The First Social Media Experiment (w/ HawnFawn)
Dev Party - Devil is in the Double X
Ghosts, Orbs, and Exploding Nitrate Film (with Dave Wilson of Victorian Photography Studio)
Dev Party - The Loneliest Pine
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