Movie fanatics revive historic artwork of pinhole images in old morgue

From the darkness of a former morgue, a team of digicam fanatics on Western Australia’s south coast are reviving the historic artwork of pinhole images.

Associates of the Albany Digicam Fanatics (ACE) converted the compact, windowless setting up into their darkroom a couple of a long time in the past.

Exactly where useless bodies were once laid out for publish-mortem investigations, there are now photographic enlargers and bottles of film developer.

ACE committee member Bob Symons explained the conversion took some function but was really worth it.

“When we initially opened the doorway, there was a curtain of cobwebs that hadn’t been cleaned for quite a few yrs,” Mr Symons said.

“I

Amazing astrophotography: How some of the most iconic space images were captured

Space photography produces stunning, otherworldly displays of intricate shapes and fiery colors, but it has also become essential in astronomers’ attempts to understand the universe. Since the first astronomical photo was taken of the moon in 1840, technology has advanced to allow scientists to snap the clearest and most accurate cosmic images.

Wide-field cameras enable orbiting cameras to shoot an extended area, while capturing objects in infrared, X-ray and other wavelengths reveals the fine details of explosions, collisions and other cosmic events. For example, by observing space using only visible light, astronomers would be unable to identify the high-energy features within the universe such as black holes. Using X-ray photography, scientists can watch as black holes steal energy from their surroundings and re-emit it in the form of high-energy jets. 

Visible light has short wavelengths, meaning that it is more likely to bounce off surrounding particles and scatter. When observing