Tuesday, November 30

Pics that you may not have seen before......






PICS TAKEN 68 YRS AGO & LEFT IN A BROWNIE CAMERA...
THE REAL PICS Isn't is amazing how a film could last so long in a camera without disintegrating? Fantastic photos taken 68 years ago. Some of you will have to go to a museum to see what a Brownie camera looked like? Here is a simple picture of what we are talking about. . .

These photos are absolutely incredible....Read below the first picture and at the end...



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unique portrait of London, a dizzying panorama of our capital city captured in unparalleled detail.
A newly published 360-degree image of London takes the crown as the largest, highest-resolution panoramic photo in the world.
The image of London has a total resolution of 80 gigapixels, or 80 billion pixels.
It is so detailed that the photographers even had to censor one image which they described as ‘naughty’ - but they have not told users where the image was found or what it was.

This new London gigapixel image, if printed at normal photographic resolution, would be 115 feet long and 56 feet high.
Shot by photographer Jeffrey Martin over a period of three days from the top of the Centre Point building at the crossroads of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road, the image reveals the highest-resolution view of any city that has ever been captured.
From this vantage point - 36 stories up in the air - an astonishing number of landmarks, houses, skyscrapers, shops, offices, and streets are visible.
Countless people at street level are observable, as well as thousands of windows, many of which reveal glimpses of life inside. The faces of any identifiable children were also blurred too.
Previous attempts at world record gigapixels include a 26-gigapixel image of Paris, a 70-gigapixel image of Budapest, a 26-gigapixel image of Dresden, and Martin's previous record holder from 2009, an 18-gigapixel spherical image of Prague.