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The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus

[PDF] The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe in Arts-Photography

Description

In 1864; a stage line driver named Matt Taylor and two associates decided Black Rock Canyon was the place for a toll bridge to handle traffic to and from Montana. The following year; their bridge opened and a town called Eagle Rock took shape. With the coming of the railroad; trains brought everyone from saloon keeper Dick Chamberlain to temperance crusader Rebecca Mitchell. To project a more genteel air; Eagle Rock became Idaho Falls in 1891. Joseph Clark; the first mayor; and newspaper publisher William Wheeler were just two of the people who helped pave the streets and turn on the lights. After assiduous wooing by boosters such as Bill Holden; D.V. Groberg; and E.F. McDermott; the Atomic Energy Commission in 1949 chose Idaho Falls for the headquarters of its National Reactor Testing Station. Today; Idaho Falls is a vital trading and service center with two hospitals; a professional baseball team; symphony orchestra; and world-class museum. It is also the hometown of some remarkable people who have gone out in the world to make names for themselves.


#1350918 in eBooks 2015-02-27 2015-02-27File Name: B00U2TUR1Q


Review
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful. A Great Book! Get a Better Picture!By S. S. FleetHey all;Im a long time worker in multimedia and the performing arts (with a theatrical education). I did a lot of theatrical lighting as slave labor back in college; but beyond that; most of my experience in film and video was from the acting side.So before shooting my next short; I decided I needed a primer in film lighting. I bought Mr. Jackmans book about a week and a half ago and; well; for geeks like me; it was a real page turner.Aside from the fact that I needed to covert all of my theater vocab (cables) to film vocab (stingers) I also found the perspective on DV film making to be dead on in this book.This book starts out outlining the technical aspects of electrics and lighting. While not the most exciting for a lot of people (although I got excited and immediatly tested all of my wall sockets with my old fluke multimeter) these sections read quick and are a necessary setup for the rest of the book. After the technical aspects are discussed; the book goes in a direction which I genually appreciate.Instead of treating DV and Video lighting like bad flat TV lighting; Mr. Jackman really goes out of his way to help all of us little guys with PD-150s and the like to light our DV dynamically and artistically. Often the book shows more thrifty workarounds for expensive concepts.While this book isnt going to contain much new information for the experienced gaffer. It will definetly help any novice; new-comer; or; like me; semi-knowledged person increase their skills in the art of lighting.Hopefully more people will read this book and less badly lit short films will infest the world. Then we can give all those die hard film guys a run for their money. To paraphase the book: The camera and medium are just tools; they dont think; we do.Finally; just to ram my point home: the book answered at least 8 of the top ten questions in the dv.com forum in great detail. It has links and addresses to all of the big lighting manufacturers as well as a pretty cool glossary in the back.69 of 71 people found the following review helpful. Great Book!By S. S. FleetHey all;Im a long time worker in multimedia and the performing arts (with a theatrical education). I did a lot of theatrical lighting as slave labor back in college; but beyond that; most of my experience in film and video was from the acting side.So before shooting my next short; I decided I needed a primer in film lighting. I bought Mr. Jackmans book about a week and a half ago and; well; for geeks like me; it was a real page turner.Aside from the fact that I needed to covert all of my theater vocab (cables) to film vocab (stingers) I also found the perspective on DV film making to be dead on in this book.This book starts out outlining the technical aspects of electrics and lighting. While not the most exciting for a lot of people (although I got excited and immediatly tested all of my wall sockets with my old fluke multimeter) these sections read quick and are a necessary setup for the rest of the book. After the technical aspects are discussed; the book goes in a direction which I genually appreciate.Instead of treating DV and Video lighting like bad flat TV lighting; Mr. Jackman really goes out of his way to help all of us little guys with PD-150s and the like to light our DV dynamically and artistically. Often the book shows more thrifty workarounds for expensive concepts.While this book isnt going to contain much new information for the experienced gaffer. It will definetly help any novice; new-comer; or; like me; semi-knowledged person increase their skills in the art of lighting.Hopefully more people will read this book and less badly lit short films will infest the world. Then we can give all those die hard film guys a run for their money. To paraphase the book: The camera and medium are just tools; they dont think; we do....102 of 103 people found the following review helpful. Too good to be trueBy Tony HallIm not really good at writing reviews; but I love this book so much that I have to say something. First of all; let me say that this book is for everyone who is interested in lighting. It doesnt matter if youre a photographer or cameraman; youll learn from reading this book. John Jackman is a real expert and is passing along his knowledge in this book.Personally; Im a digital photographer and videographer that has been perplexed by the whole lighting thing for years. Im no pro if youre wondering. This is the third book that Ive bought about lighting and the prior two books really didnt teach me anything at all (see my very bad review of the Lighting Cookbook). The authors of the other books are just spoon feeding you tips and diagrams without explaining the logic behind them. Its as if they dont want you to learn anything. Well; John Jackman doesnt just give you a fish; he teaches you to fish and once you finish this book youll have enough knowledge of lighting to do just about anything and actually understand what youre doing and why.I received this book in the mail about four days ago and already finished. I just couldnt stop reading it. Once I read the first few pages; I knew that I had bought the right book and I felt like I was actually learning something the whole time.Im a digital photographer and if you shoot digital with a prosumer camera; you should know that you cant use the same equipment that they use at your local studio. Its just not very compatible. So; I have to use continuous lighting like they do for video and film making. It has many advantages and is every bit as good. I do video too; so the lighting equipment can be used for both. Anyway; Ive got this huge lighting catalog from BH photo and its got pretty much any kind of light and accessory that you could want. The only problem is that it doesnt explain what they are and how to use it. This book explains all of this and thats actually why I bought it in the first place. If it wasnt for the "look inside" feature here at .com; I wouldnt have been able to tell what the book covered. So; after seeing the table of contents I bought it. Now when I flip through the catalog; I know what Im looking at and what it does. Instead of just blindly buying something; I know exactly what I need for my purposes.Unlike other books that claim to give you low to no budget solutions; this book actually has quite a few. Although much of the equipment mentioned is very expensive. Another one of my favorite things about this book is the glossary with plain language thats easy to read. Almost every term that I didnt know could be found in the back with a simple explanation.My only complaint and its really a non-complaint is the excruciatingly boring detail the author would go into when explaining the way our eyes work and some other things. I know that it is relevant and useful information and he means well; but I almost fell asleep through that part. The studio lighting chapter is pretty boring too unless youre going to be a gaffer for CNN. It shouldnt be skipped; but maybe skimmed through.All in all; I knew this book would be good; but it exceeded my expectations. When they say "expert series" they mean it because this guy knows it all and doesnt mind making an expert out of you either. The great thing about this book is that it assumes that you dont really know anything like a "for dummies" book; but its not insulting to your intelligence. The author doesnt try to keep you interested by telling stupid jokes or using childish examples. He isnt so full of himself that the book is about him or his work. The book is about lighting and he takes you from the very basics to the advanced Hollywood style lighting.Im sorry if this review was annoyingly over-positive; but Im just very happy with it and I highly recommend it. I also recommend getting a lighting catelog from BH Photo or some other place so you can see photos of all the lights and tools that are mentioned.

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