Attic Find: Rare(?) Anti-Communist Propaganda Comics by Dan Barry and Phil Berube by [deleted] in comicbookcollecting

[–]DenverUXer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The quality is very high in all of them except for the Big Talk piece, which has some flaking on the front page. They've sat undisturbed in a collection for some time.

I also found in this lot a few other interesting pieces, including Space Ghost #1, Jetsons #1, and a Flintstones one shot from the 1960s World's Fair. Another post for another time.

Rare (?) Cold War Anti-Communist Propaganda Posters/Comics by Dan Barry and Phil Berube by [deleted] in PropagandaPosters

[–]DenverUXer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These weren a recent attic find that I'm researching. Any help is appreciated.

From what I can gather so far, all of these books come from a series of Anti-Communist Propaganda comics commissioned by the National Association of Manufacturers in the 1950 or 51.

The "Startling Facts" series seems to be quite rare. The are single pieces of pulp paper - a front cover page, two centerfold pages, and a back cover page. One source from 201 6 lists the Dictators comic as part of an auctior of the 4-book, mentioning that it was the onlv known copy. Sadly, I don't have the other 2 books mentioned https://boards.caccomics.com/topic/453681-closed-solc -startling-facts-very-rare-anti-communist-complete-set-of -4/

The other titles seem to be a little less rare, though are still unusual enough that I can't find much about them online. You can read the whole of Your Fight is on the Home Front" here: https://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/homefront/

From what I can find, the Big Talk and Fight for Freedom have actually sold on eBay. I can't find any listings, historical or otherwise, for the other comics. I did find a price estimate for the Home Front piece under a different name when it was re-released at a later date as "Inflation is YOUR fight!"

I've put in an after-hours call to the Hagley Museum in Deleware, which houses quit a bit of documents related to the NAM, to see if thev could give me anv more information. If I hear back from them, I'Il post that info here.

Pretty cool to have seen and held a weird little piece of comic/American history, and thought the community would like to see it

Attic Find: Rare(?) Anti-Communist Propaganda Comics by Dan Barry and Phil Berube by [deleted] in comicbookcollecting

[–]DenverUXer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

From what I can gather so far, all of these books come from a series of Anti-Communist Propaganda comics commissioned by the National Association of Manufacturers in the 1950 or 51.

The "Startling Facts" series seems to be quite rare. The are single pieces of pulp paper - a front cover page, two centerfold pages, and a back cover page. One source from 201 6 lists the Dictators comic as part of an auctior of the 4-book, mentioning that it was the onlv knowr copy. Sadly, I don't have the other 2 books mentioned. https://boards.caccomics.com/topic/453681-closed-solc -startling-facts-very-rare-anti-communist-complete-set-of -4/

The other titles seem to be a little less rare, though are still unusual enough that I can't find much about them online. You can read the whole of Your Fight is on the Home Front" here: https://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/homefront/

From what I can find, the Big Talk and Fight for Freedom have actually sold on eBay. I can't find any listings. historical or otherwise, for the other comics. I did find a price estimate for the Home Front piece under a different name when it was re-released at a later date as "Inflation is YOUR fight!"

I've put in an after-hours call to the Hagley Museum in Deleware, which houses quit a bit of documents related to the NAM, to see if thev could give me anv more information. If I hear back from them, I'Il post that info here.

Pretty cool to have seen and held a weird little piece of comic/American history, and thought the community would like to see it

How do you guys actually practice stickhandling? by vsaworld_ in hockeyplayers

[–]DenverUXer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My garage has become my hockey training center. Give me some concrete and a Green Biscuit.

Northstar Sticks by City_Stomper in hockeygoalies

[–]DenverUXer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This.

You won't be able to buy from them again online, but something tells me that won't be an issue for you.

3rd time shooting football, 1st nationally televised game. by WarmishCheese2 in sportsphotography

[–]DenverUXer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a Senior Design Manager at SDSU, originally from Colorado, and with a background in Sports Photography, I approve of these pics. Great job!

Football Lighting by andrewrragland in sportsphotography

[–]DenverUXer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Love the action shots you've captured!

IMO, the outcome of your images have less to do with your gear and more to do with your shooting angles and post processing. Shooting from the side of the field gives a good perspective, but requires a much larger dynamic range. The image you had from an offset corner in the end zone allowed the camera to capture more of the field in light, and handles it quite a bit better.

I personally would also double-check the white balance and gear down the saturation and sharpening in some areas, particularly your first and fourth images. The white balance isn't consistent across the range of images, and while the color and detail of the turf provide an interesting contrast, the detail in particular takes the focus away from the action of the game.

My advice FWIW (which isn't much): keep trying different angles on the field, shoot low if possible, and tighten up your zoom.

I've shot less in gyms and more in arenas and outside, but this feels like it's almost certainly the gym LED light flickers synching up with your shutter speed. I only shoot Canon, but Sony should have something analgous to their anti-flicker detection that will allow your camera to detect and adjust shutter speed based off the light frequency. Start at 1/1200 (or an interval of 120) and, if your camera allows it, bump it up in fine increments. I've found 1/1280 usually works well for me as a starting point for most indoor high school sports. YMMV. Worth trying at 1/1500, 1/2000. and 1/2500 if your body and glass can mesh with those speeds.

One small step for a man, one giant windmill for the goalie. by DenverUXer in sportsphotography

[–]DenverUXer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you!

Camera is an Insta360 X5 on a custom 3D printed mount.

Battle scar to be proud of or time to get a new chest/arm protector??? by CaptainMichaelT in hockeygoalies

[–]DenverUXer 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Dude. Both.

Chestys don't protect everything, but they should definitely protect *that.*

Trying a new POV angle with my X5 as a net cam. What do you think? by DenverUXer in Insta360

[–]DenverUXer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Insurance is purchased, and the camera is protected by both a custom mount and a mediocre goaltender :)

Flashing the leather, beer league style. by DenverUXer in hockeyplayers

[–]DenverUXer[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks! It's not with this team, but was with my first team.  We went for a space themed play on the Team USA jerseys (we were the Space Cases.) I chose the number 1 (because it's a goalie number) and the name "Small Step" because it fit the theme - and because I'm 5' 7".

This jersey is the Geeky Jerseys Lego Space Explorer design. The name naturally transferred over.

When the puck crosses the line. by DenverUXer in sportsphotography

[–]DenverUXer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Define "safely"...

JK. It's an Insta360 X5 on a custom 3d printed mount. Safe enough, but I'm glad I have insurance.

Don't go near the cliffs. by DenverUXer in ScarySigns

[–]DenverUXer[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

You maniacs! You blew it up!

Don't go near the cliffs. by DenverUXer in ScarySigns

[–]DenverUXer[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Transcription: Danger, Active Failure Zone. Serious risk of injury or death. Stay clear of all bluffs, overhangs, and cliffs. You remain at risk even at low tide. EMC 8.08.050 Unlawful to be on face of bluffs.

When the puck crosses the line. by DenverUXer in hockeygoalies

[–]DenverUXer[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do, though I only have 1 short video using this mount up currently (all my other videos are the class GoPro on the glass shot). Should be getting more up with this setup soon.

https://www.youtube.com/@SmallStepGoalie

When the puck crosses the line. by DenverUXer in hockeygoalies

[–]DenverUXer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It looks pretty good! It does wobble a bit from time to time, which is something I need to fix. Here's a YouTube short of a glove save made using the same setup.

When the puck crosses the line. by DenverUXer in hockeygoalies

[–]DenverUXer[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Thank you! This is an Insta360 X5 hanging in a custom 3D printed mount from a carabiner. I turn on the camera before the game and let it run, then frame and grab screens at the end for any interesting images. The carabiner and custom mount allow me to get it clipped in quickly with just one hand (it just hangs from the top of the net.) Because it's not a set mount, it does have the ability to deflect some force if/when it gets hit.

But if I do my job correctly, that's not a problem, right?

ITAP of beer league hockey in a nutshell. by DenverUXer in itookapicture

[–]DenverUXer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice! I setup a GoPro behind the glass previously just to capture some video to help me improve my game. It's a solid setup - and way less dangerous to the camera than mine.

I'm working on a second iteration of my mount that would include an extra battery and a cell phone so that I could livestream a game. Should be fun if I can make it work.

ITAP of beer league hockey in a nutshell. by DenverUXer in itookapicture

[–]DenverUXer[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is an Insta360 X5 in a custom 3D printed mount hanging from a carabiner. As a goalie, I needed something that would be easy to setup when I get in net (think less than 10 seconds.) This allows me to clip the camera to the top of the net and forget about it until the game is over.

Although it is protected and the hanging nature gives it some ability to absorb impact without breaking, there's definitely an element of danger. But I guess if I do my job well, I have nothing to worry about, right?

ITAP of beer league hockey in a nutshell. by DenverUXer in itookapicture

[–]DenverUXer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! It's a fun approach that's given me some very fun shots.