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Wendy Snaps
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Wendy Snaps
@WendySnaps
Cosplay photographer based in Toronto | Moody, elegant, and dramatic photo editing style
Toronto, Ontario Katılım Kasım 2020
126 Takip Edilen129 Takipçiler
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Anyways happy house of the dragon day 🐉🩷
Photography @WendySnaps
Dragon buckles designed and printed by @dangerousladies
#HouseOfTheDragon


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@Withanhmedia @Pawko4b @StrawBunniCos aw thank you so much for the feedback, I’m so incredibly flattered. dm me!! I’ll show you how I did it :)
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Wendy Snaps retweetledi
Wendy Snaps retweetledi
Wendy Snaps retweetledi

cosplay 新世紀エヴァンゲリオン
葛城ミサト:はるさん(@harushiki55)
碇シンジ:アヒルさん(@sirenyamibito02)
撮影: ᴍᴀᴛsᴜsʜɪᴍᴀ(@koiwai_2470)

日本語
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more pics from my #raincode shoot with @WendySnaps and @banshee_boy_! thanks again @raincode_SC @kazkodaka for this awesome game!


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Wendy Snaps retweetledi

The best use of “Day For Night” in cinema was on Jordan Peele’s NOPE.
It looks significantly more realistic than most other films that try to pull it off, largely because of a technique that DP Hoyte Van Hoytema brought over from his experience shooting AD ASTARA.
A 3D camera rig was modified so that both a 65mm film camera and a digital / infrared Arri Alexa could capture the exact same shot simultaneously. The Alexa’s image was inverted and used for the sky replacements, achieving a truer night sky look.
The 65mm film footage was then composited on top, bringing in the natural color and texture.
This was a completely new and innovative approach to shooting day for night, and arguably the best use case ever.



Los Angeles, CA 🇺🇸 English
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Wendy Snaps retweetledi

On this day 45 years ago came out one of the greatest movies ever made, Stanley Kubrick's "Napoleon".
Kubrick decided to shoot with natural light and reused the Zeus f.007 lenses like in Barry Lyndon, but due to a piece of debris that hit the lens, one of them cracked and they had to resort to the only other one in existence




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The Japanese love to pretend that they were just sitting around on the beach braiding flowers into each other's hair when the evil round-eyed devils suddenly targeted them for a weapons test.
Let's see what the Japanese did:
1. Literally allied themselves with the literal nazis.
2. Launched military attacks on neutral powers without a declaration of war.
3. Committed their own separate Holocaust in Asia with a far greater body count: approximately 30 million.
4. Conducted medical experiments on prisoners of war including vivisection, amputations without anesthesia, and testing of biological weapons.
5. Used chemical weapons on over 2000 occasions, including on civilian targets and prisoners of war.
6. Tortured prisoners of war.
7. Executed prisoners of war.
8. Used Filipino civilians as human shields.
9. Ate prisoners of war. Yes, you read that correctly.
10. Committed mass rape of civilian women in conquered territories.
11. Feigned surrender to draw Allied forces into ambush.
12. Attacked hospital ships at sea.
In short, during WW2, the entire nation of Japan descended to a level of savagery that made the nazis and even the communists look like amateurs.
By contrast, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were selected as military targets, and were struck three days apart, giving the Japanese a chance to surrender after the first attack, which they did not do.
Casualties inflicted by both attacks equaled 0.76% of the victims of Japanese war crimes.
Not only were the twin nuclear strikes entirely justified, they were a measured, controlled, and understated response. It would have made complete sense for the United States to use one or both weapons to level Tokyo instead.
The imperial Japanese were worse than the nazis. Their body count was worse, their atrocities were worse, their evil was worse.
And the moral of this story is "don't be a fucking fascist, don't do fascist shit, and then decent people won't have to kill you in order to save innocent lives".
AJ+@ajplus
Oppenheimer has been released in Japan, eight months after its global release. We spoke to historian Naoko Wake to learn why the U.S. refuses to take accountability for the war crimes it committed in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and why all of this is relevant to us today.
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