
Did some skiing this winter up at Mammoth Mountain with the family and got them to do a morning run with me. Along the adventure we crossed this bridge located just to the North of Old Mammoth Road up and to the end of Waterford Ave. Sometimes the kids would stay still enough to get a cha-cha. My trusty Fuji GA645w is the only light enough MF camera I can take on an adventure hike/run, but you have to do cha-chas, hoping the left and right images are still enough to give the stereo illusion without retinal rivalry.
Tag Archives: Philip Steinman
Philip’s Folio a30 Submissions
Vincent’s 6th Birthday Party
My four kids sitting in our kitchen behind the cake: Valentine 7, Emilie 8, Vincent 6, and Kevin 10 with baby pics of Vincent in the foreground, surrounded by this years crop of friends, classmates, and teammates on his A’s AA little league team. A family snapshot, but hopefully something more to remember.
Kids at Paramount Ranch
Kevin 10, Valentine 7, Vincent 6, and Emilie 8 These are my 4 kids at one of our favorite places to hike, explore, watch silent movies under the stars, and dream of being in a cowboy western movie. Some overlapping of images here as I manually wind the TL120 camera. I cropped this out.
MVP Swing, Hunter LaPlante
Every team has one, an MVP, only Hunter was also the 10 year old’s league MVP. 7 of his teammates scattered across this photo with 3 of them looking on (the one in the middle is my son Kevin). Hunter has a sweet baseball swing. He never strikes out and hits 3rd in the lineup of our championship team. You can see the intensity and focus in his eyes with his level perfect bat meets the ball swing.
Shot with Kodak EPR film on TL120 which gives an entirely different look (nostalgic) than Fuji Provia (realistic).
Yankees Championship Photo
The Encino Little League Minors 2018 Championship was won by the Yankees. A year these kids will never forget as they went wire to wire 1st place and undefeated in the playoffs to capture the championship trophy.
Shot with Kodak EPR film on TL120 which gives an entirely different look (nostalgic) than Fuji Provia (realistic).
I had some problems winding the manual TL120 camera. Do you wind until the # shot is in the red viewfinder on back or do you wind until the # is in the viewer finder or passes it and the wind is complete? Because of this I had some images that overlapped at the edges (and I cropped that part out). Tips appreciated, as I usually shot with my autowind Fuji GA645w, but always cha-cha.
My Medium Format Slides
Taken cha-cha with my Fuji GA645W and a CU lens at my light table. This shot has images that have toured the folio before, so if you’ve been around, you’ve seen them in 3D 😉 There’s a nice image of our LA3DClub in there too with some 3D friends that may be your friends too (L-R.. Ray Zone, David Kuntz, myself, John Hart, Lawrence Kaufman, Ed?, ?, Oliver Dean, Cassie Kaufman, ?, ?, Steve Berezin. Fun stuff.

Griffith Park Trail
On another run, this time with the Fuji GA645w which I can pack and run with, using Provia 100. This angle is expansive from the Griffith Park trail that leads to the Observatory Overlook. You can see Silver Lake Resevoir, downtown Los Angeles and deeper in the background is the Palos Verdes Peninsula and behind it Catalina. Taken cha-cha style.

Sunset at Lake Balboa
The nearest lake and it’s only 4 miles from my house. I run here often. Lake Balboa is in the Sepulveda Dam Recreation area in the San Fernando Valley, a suburb of Los Angeles. I used at Sputnik and Fujichrome RDP III 100.

Kids at Paramount Ranch
Summer time at Paramount Ranch, Calabasas, CA is a wonderland for my family. We watch the Silents Under the Stars program put on by Hollywood Heritage and the National Park Service. I took this with the World 3D camera and it flarred so I cropped it. Left to right: Kevin is 8, Vincent 4, Emilie 6, and Valentine 5. Shot on Kodak EPR 64 Ektachrome.
Alpine Barn, Dolomites, Italy
Dolomite Mountains
Location Alta Via Trail, 3 hrs N Venice
Technical Fuji GA645w (cha-cha no slide bar ), Fuji Provia F100
Comments In July of 2014 my wife and I trail ran and trekked the
Dolomites in the Italian Alps. There is a lot to see here: the classic
Dolomite peak craggy rock formations, the wild flowers that slowed down
just enough for me to take this stereo pair cha-cha, maybe not the
moving clouds in the bg.
Lagazuoi Sauna, Dolomites, Italy
Location Alta Via Trail, 3 hrs N Venice
Technical Fuji GA645w (cha-cha no slide bar ), Fuji Provia F100
Comments In July of 2014 my wife and I trail ran and trekked the
Dolomites in the Italian Alps. This view is the famous sauna at the
Lagazuoi refugio that awaits you after a long trek to get there.
Dolomite pond, Dolomites, Italy
Dolomites
Picnic Table Waterfall
In July of 2014, my wife and I trail ran and trekked the Dolomites in the Italian Alps. There is a lot to see here and we opted to take a guided running tour with holomites.com. After a brief rest at this picnic table, we made an easy climb to the base of the falls.
The Cross
This view is an inspired resting place where views of the mountains and summer wild flowers surround you in every direction. After my cha-cha shot, I put my camera back in my Osprey Rev 6 hydration pack and ran to catch up.
Giant Leaves
While running along the river bank I was enamored with the giant leaves you see here. If you were to stand in the bunch, you’d be knee deep more in water, and single leaf would provide a good hat from the sun.
Dolomite Garden
I ran by many summer gardens in the ski town, but this one made me stop, take out my camera for a cha-cha shot. If you look closely at the background you can see a car on the road and few cable cars in different positions in the left and right images 🙂
All images were made with a Fuji GA645w using Provia 100F film.
Baby Vincent, 11 months
Title Baby Vincent, 11 months
Location Van Nuys, California April 2013
Technical Fuji GA645w (slide bar, F22, 2”, Kodak EPR 64)
Comments He is my little star, my darling, my 4th child in 5 years, my second son, and my future. The only way to photograph a baby cha-cha style is while they sleep. Here he is shot with my Fuji GA645 closeup filter, with a Benbo tripod hanging over his body. His eyes fluttered when I pressed the release on the 2nd and 3rd exposures. I used the 1st and 4th exposures and got lucky because the separation of 1cm was made for pairs 1&2 or 3&4, but 1&4 also had 1cm and created the proper separation for this 3D image.
Statue of Alfred Eisenstaedt’s V-J Day Life Magazine Photograph Aboard the USS Iowa Battleship
Title: Statue of Alfred Eisenstaedt’s V-J Day Life Magazine Photograph Aboard the USS Iowa Battleship
Location San Pedro, California December 2012
Technical Fuji GA645w (cha-cha no slide bar ), Fuji Provia F100
Comments In 2012 the West Coast’s only Battleship opened to the public in San Pedro with the USS Iowa. The self-guided tour takes you on a journey through World War II, the Korean War, and the Cold War to experience the life of a sailor on the lead ship of the last class of gunships. The USS Iowa was the only ship of her class to have served in the Atlantic Ocean during World War II. Despite the 16” guns, 5” guns, missile decks, bridge, mess areas, and world famous Captain’s Cabin – with the only bathtub installed on a battleship for a President, the most interesting item on the boat for me was this statue errected of the photograph of the nurse’s iconic kiss that marked the end of World War II. The battleship alone is certainly a symbol of this and world peace but for a public display, they chose to combine the weapon of a battleship with the softness of a kiss. The lasting power of a single photograph lives on.
On Aug. 14, 1945 New York City’s Times Square went dark at 7 p.m. and then at 7:03 p.m.,more than 750,000 people roared in jubilation as the words “OFFICIAL—TRUMAN ANNOUNCES JAPANESE SURRENDER” blazed across the news scroll. Elated by the news, people in the crowd were hugging and crying tears of joy, but it was a far different experience for Edith Shain, a nursing school student. “This sailor just grabbed me and kissed me,” she said. “Any female closes her eyes when she’s about to kiss so I never saw the guy, and then I walked away. I was kind of embarrassed. I didn’t say anything about it to anyone.” What Shain didn’t realize, until a week later, was that her “indiscretion” was caught on film. While browsing a copy of a Life magazine, Shain, then 27-years-old, recognized herself in what has became an iconic photo titled “V-J Day” (Victory over Japan) of a sailor slightly dipping a nurse in a white uniform and kissing her. Of the kiss, Shain said, “It was very nice, and of course, it was in the days before you’d scream and go to an attorney. It was the best of times.” The famous photo was taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt, a photojournalist for Life Magazine. In his memoirs, Eisenstaedt explained, “Suddenly, in a flash, I saw something white being grabbed. I turned around and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse….People tell me that when I am in heaven they will remember this picture.” Though Eisenstaedt died in 1995 at the age of 96, the celebrated picture has not lost its significance. In celebration of the 60th anniversary of V-J Day, Shain flew to New York City where a slightly larger-than-life-size statue titled “Unconditional Soldier” by J. Seward Johnson based on the Life photograph was unveiled on Aug. 11, in Times Square.
View from the Shoin Building of The Japanese Garden
Title View from the Shoin Building of The Japanese Garden
Location Van Nuys, California April 2013
Technical Fuji GA645w (cha-cha no slide bar ), Fuji Provia F100
Comments Major architectural entities in the garden include the Shoin building which projects over the lake and adjoins the teahouse. Shoin was the residential dwelling developed for aristocrats, upper class monks and samurai during the 14th and 15th centuries. The exterior of this building is authentically shoin style, but the interior has been modified to provide a place for meetings and special events. While the room does survey a panoramic view of the garden, notice the white window blinds that slide horizontally. The Japanese garden style is to reveal only portions of the garden at a time from a seating and not the entire panoramic view at once.
View of The Japanese Garden
Location Van Nuys, California April 2013
Technical Fuji GA645w (cha-cha no slide bar ), Fuji Provia F100
Comments The Japanese Garden, dedicated June 18th, 1984, is a 6½ acre authentic Japanese garden fashioned after “stroll gardens” constructed during the 18th and 19th centuries for Japanese Feudal lords. The trees are manicured to reduce any dense foliage and promote three dimensional views that allows one to see the pines, lake, and administration building in the background. The foot path allows two people to enter together in order to encourage courtesy and to allow the viewing of small portions of The Garden from different vantage points.










