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Thank you all for your kind words. I'm working on improvements and I am also working on what I hope to be an accurate sun/shadow simulation (SSS) of MJK1 (the external photo of No.13).
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How she ever moved from MJK1 to MJK3 without human intervention is one of the Whitechapel murders' more intriguing mysteries.
Regards,
Simon
We know there was a police surgeon in attendance. We know that time of death was routinely estimated by the progress of rigor mortis. This would surely involve movement of the limbs or an attempt to do so. I would argue for human intervention having taken place in the form of the police surgeon's activities.
I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.
Excellent work, and as you can see, so many of us are grateful...
Really looking forward to your revised version...can I ask out of interest why you settled eventually for a 50mm lens? I'm aware that in modern times it's regarded as a "standard", but did the same actually hold true during the glass plate bellows era?
Not a trick question, nor am I trying to make a point...just, as a one-time, long-ago, hobbyist photographer, curious...I don't know where I got it but I have an impression that back in the 1880s the standard lens, if such existed, was closer to 40mm...but I'm going back thirty five to forty years, so I may well be wrong...
Excellent work, and as you can see, so many of us are grateful...
Really looking forward to your revised version...can I ask out of interest why you settled eventually for a 50mm lens? I'm aware that in modern times it's regarded as a "standard", but did the same actually hold true during the glass plate bellows era?
Not a trick question, nor am I trying to make a point...just, as a one-time, long-ago, hobbyist photographer, curious...I don't know where I got it but I have an impression that back in the 1880s the standard lens, if such existed, was closer to 40mm...but I'm going back thirty five to forty years, so I may well be wrong...
All the best
Dave
G'day Dave
On a 35 mm they were, but of course MJK were shot on something much bigger probable a plate camera with a "Negative" from memory 8.5"X6.5" and an 11" or about 220mm lens.
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