Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Motion Of Process • American Photographer Mark Fisher • Czech Sport Theme Postage

 





Motion Of Process

 • American Photographer Mark Fisher • 

Czech Sport Theme Postage

From The 1950's 

This One Had Cancellation Marks 

They Had To Be Removed 

Before Being Processed 

Manipulated For The Build 

The Color Was Enhanced 

By Pushing The Saturation 

All Completed During Post Lab 

In New York City 




Just Be Creative™



 No Second Usage Without Permission


All Rights Reserved • Models,Actors, Actresses,Dancers,

 Musicians Used In The Web Posts Are Professionals

 and Require Fee For Any Publication or Usage. 

All Have Management. 

Removal Of The Image Or Blog May Violate U.S. Laws.


Photographer Mark Fisher™ Is 

A Well Accomplished Published Photographer 

In Beauty, Fashion, and Music Photography. 


New York City 

Based Image And Filmmaker

Has A Worldwide Following. 

Is A Member Of The Press. 


There Is Fan Page On Facebook.


 http://www.facebook.com/AmericanPhotographerMarkFisher 


  Commissions Accepted Through Contract


• New York • • Paris • • Milan • • London • 


  Private Client Request Accepted. 


Website www.americanphotographernyc1.com


For More Info Contact 

Green Key Management 


New York, New York 

greenkeym@aol.com 


Thank You  



Tuesday, October 6, 2020

The Handshake In Space • American Photographer Mark Fisher • Afghan-Soviet Joint Mission





The Handshake In Space

 • American Photographer Mark Fisher • 

Afghan-Soviet Joint Mission

The Program Was Open To All Countries 

That Connected To The USSR 

There Was A Call For Volunteers 

Looking For Qualified Persons 

Even Some U.S. Pilots Jumped On The Offer 

Something Happened To The Cosmonauts On Staff

Many Left The Program 

(No Budget) For Occupied Orbits

Little Known To The West 

The Press Never Caught 

The Story In 1988 

The Launch Had Problems On A New Location 

MOSCOW, AUG. 29 1988 -- Washington Post Reported

The Soviet Union And Afghanistan 

Began A Joint Space Mission Today

 When Two Russian Cosmonauts 

And An Afghan Crew Mate 

Blasted Off From A Launch Pad In Central Asia. 

The Soyuz TM6 spacecraft

 Is To link Up With The Mir Craft,

 The Soviet Union's Orbiting Space Station

Then All Kinds Of Trouble 

Happen On Board The Main Craft 

Oxygen System Failed 

The Crew Left The Main Food Supply 

On The Their Capsule

The Los Angeles Times Caught A Bit Of It 

 

Two cosmonauts, stranded in space


Major Issues With 

Everything 

 With Life-Support Systems Expected 

To Last Only Two More Days,

 Successfully Returned To Earth 

 Early Today After Failing Twice On Tuesday,

 

Radio Moscow And The Official Tass News Agency Reported.


The Cosmonauts, One From The Soviet Union 

and the other from Afghanistan,

Had Only Enough Oxygen For 48 Hours 

And Only Emergency Food Stocks 

Left On Board their Soyuz TM-5 spaceship, 

according to specialists at the Soviet space center here.


Tass reported that “both cosmonauts feel fine after the landing.”

Even Nasa Offered Help, Of Course... Rejected 

Here Is More

 

Two cosmonauts, stranded in space with life-support systems expected to last only two more days, successfully returned to Earth early today after failing twice on Tuesday, Radio Moscow and the official Tass news agency reported.

The cosmonauts, one from the Soviet Union and the other from Afghanistan, had only enough oxygen for 48 hours and only emergency food stocks left aboard their Soyuz TM-5 spaceship, according to specialists at the Soviet space center here.
Tass reported that “both cosmonauts feel fine after the landing.”
No other details on the descent and landing were immediately available.
And Here Is More
The two cosmonauts, Soviet veteran Vladimir Lyakhov, 47, and Afghan pilot Abdul Ahad Mohmand, 29, were returning from the Soviet Union’s orbiting Mir space station when control system equipment aboard their spaceship malfunctioned, initially preventing them from landing in Soviet Central Asia. Mohmand is the first Afghan in space.
“Don’t worry, nothing terrible has happened,” Valery Ryumin, an official at the mission control center, earlier told Izvestia, the government newspaper.
But Ryumin said that, after two equipment failures, the Soyuz crew might be forced to descend using manual rather than automatic controls in order to end the flight as soon as possible.
“According to a report by specialists of the mission control center,” Tass said in a dispatch before the successful third attempt, “life-sustaining resources of the cosmonauts will suffice for 48 hours. However, they are in for difficult hours in orbit until the designated time of landing; the descent vehicle in which they are now is not provided with everyday living facilities.”
The Soyuz reentry module that carried the cosmonauts is designed for short flights only and did not have the capability to return to the Mir space station, which it left Monday after five days. The Soyuz orbital module was jettisoned just before the first reentry attempt.
The cosmonauts’ predicament brought an offer of assistance on Tuesday from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which said its global space tracking and communications system, more sophisticated than the Soviets’, could keep constant contact with the spacecraft.
Although the Soviet mission control center initially turned down the U.S. offer, saying the problems were “minor” and that no assistance was required, NASA renewed it Tuesday evening in a cable to Moscow.
“We saw reports that (the situation) may be more serious, and we stand by ready to help,” Jennifer Clapp, a NASA spokeswoman, said in Washington.
Although the United States and the Soviet Union do not have an agreement providing for cooperation on manned space flights, President Reagan and Mikhail S. Gorbachev, the Soviet leader, did agree last year on closer cooperation in space sciences.
“The news from Moscow was so striking that we wanted to help,” Clapp had said.
The first re-entry attempt failed, according to Soviet space officials, when rays from the sun, as the spacecraft orbited from night into day, prevented the operation of an infrared sensor that enables the Soyuz to orient itself based on the thermal radiation from Earth.
Turned On Too Late
As a result, the spacecraft’s engine turned on too late, cosmonaut Alexander Alexandrov told Soviet newsmen at the mission center. Re-entry then would have meant overshooting the planned landing area by 435 to 500 miles and perhaps coming down across the Soviet border in China.
The spacecraft’s motor was turned off, Alexandrov said, and preparations were made for a second reentry attempt three hours later on a subsequent orbit with the data needed for orientation taken from the Soyuz computer.
But that attempt failed, according to Alexandrov, because the spaceship’s automatic equipment had not been fully reset after the first try, and the engine fired for only six seconds rather than the nearly four minutes required.
The mission control center then decided to postpone the landing until today.
Sergei Zagorodny, a spokesman for Glavkosmos, said earlier that the mission control center had been in radio contact with the cosmonauts and was confident that they would be able to land today.
Possible Manual Descent “The cosmonauts must now choose another descent path,” he had said, adding that they would either have to reprogram the computer for an automatic landing or descend using manual controls to land in Kazakhstan in Soviet Central Asia.
The cosmonauts themselves were reported to have taken their predicament without concern.
“There is food, but we won’t touch it,” Izvestia quoted Lyakhov as saying as he joked about preferring to defer lunch rather than tax the spacecraft’s limited sewage disposal system. “There’s never been anything like this.”
Lyakhov and Mohmand, accompanied by Valery Polyakov, a Soviet cosmonaut-physician, blasted off from Baikonur, the Soviet launch center in Kazakhstan, on Aug. 29 in a mission that the Soviet Union and Afghanistan hailed as marking their cooperation in peace after the long Soviet involvement in the Afghan civil war.
The three docked with the orbiting Mir space station two days later, joining two other Soviet cosmonauts already on board. On Monday, they were shown on Soviet television announcing the completion of their week of research and their return to Earth.
Due to Set Record
Polyakov, 46, stayed on Mir to monitor the health of the other cosmonauts, Vladimir Titov and Musa Manarov, who were launched last Dec. 21 and are due to set a space endurance record by remaining in orbit a full year.
The research done by the Soviet-Afghan mission included space photography of remote regions of Afghanistan to search for mineral and water resources and to plan the country’s economic development.
The spacecraft they are using, the TM-5, had been left docked with the Mir space station in June by a joint Soviet-Bulgarian crew, and their original ship, the Soyuz TM-6, is now docked at Mir.
∆ 

Stamp Captured Under Daylight Conditions 

Manipulated During Post Lab 

In New York City 




Just Be Creative™



 No Second Usage Without Permission


All Rights Reserved • Models,Actors, Actresses,Dancers,

 Musicians Used In The Web Posts Are Professionals

 and Require Fee For Any Publication or Usage. 

All Have Management. 

Removal Of The Image Or Blog May Violate U.S. Laws.


Photographer Mark Fisher™ Is 

A Well Accomplished Published Photographer 

In Beauty, Fashion, and Music Photography. 


New York City 

Based Image And Filmmaker

Has A Worldwide Following. 

Is A Member Of The Press. 


There Is Fan Page On Facebook.


 http://www.facebook.com/AmericanPhotographerMarkFisher 


  Commissions Accepted Through Contract


• New York • • Paris • • Milan • • London • 


  Private Client Request Accepted. 


Website www.americanphotographernyc1.com


For More Info Contact 

Green Key Management 


New York, New York 

greenkeym@aol.com 


Thank You  






 

Sunday, October 4, 2020

Sepia Duck • American Photographer Mark Fisher • Postage Of Czechoslovakia

 



Sepia Duck 

• American Photographer Mark Fisher • 

Postage Of Czechoslovakia 

This One Is Cool 

Okay, Black Ink On Old Yellowed Paper

Some Genius Colored The Image Area 

With A Orange-sh Ink Stamp

Yuck... A Mess... 

Captured With Direct Sunlight 

To Wash Out The Debris Of Stains 

Did Not Remove The Cancellation 

Oh, Next Time 

Tinted It With A Touch Of Magic 

Modified And Manipulated 

Jamming The Core For Great Background

To Complete The Visual Result 

In New York City 




Just Be Creative™



 No Second Usage Without Permission


All Rights Reserved • Models,Actors, Actresses,Dancers,

 Musicians Used In The Web Posts Are Professionals

 and Require Fee For Any Publication or Usage. 

All Have Management. 

Removal Of The Image Or Blog May Violate U.S. Laws.


Photographer Mark Fisher™ Is 

A Well Accomplished Published Photographer 

In Beauty, Fashion, and Music Photography. 


New York City 

Based Image And Filmmaker

Has A Worldwide Following. 

Is A Member Of The Press. 


There Is Fan Page On Facebook.


 http://www.facebook.com/AmericanPhotographerMarkFisher 


  Commissions Accepted Through Contract


• New York • • Paris • • Milan • • London • 


  Private Client Request Accepted. 


Website www.americanphotographernyc1.com


For More Info Contact 

Green Key Management 


New York, New York 

greenkeym@aol.com 


Thank You  








Saturday, October 3, 2020

Victory Day • American Photographer Mark Fisher • 1988 Soviet Postage




Victory Day 

• American Photographer Mark Fisher •

 1988 Soviet Postage

If You Are A History Buff 

The WWII Ended In 1945

Maybe The Troops Left 1948

The Eastern Block Countries 

Because The Money Was Running Out 

The Supplies Were Getting Harder To Find

For The Men Stuck There 

The Illustration Makes No Sense

Of Course, They Threw This One Together

They Needed Something 

Who Knows, Back In The USSR

Nobody Celebrated Going Back 

Shhh.... Loads Received Refugee Status. 

And Lived Their Lives In That Form For Years 

And Some Made To The U.S. In 1990's

∆ 

Resurfaced The Stamp 

Working The Borders 

Pushing The Digital Core 

Pulling The Background Saturation

It Fits 

Completed Visual Outcome 

During Post Production 

In New York City




Just Be Creative™



 No Second Usage Without Permission


All Rights Reserved • Models,Actors, Actresses,Dancers,

 Musicians Used In The Web Posts Are Professionals

 and Require Fee For Any Publication or Usage. 

All Have Management. 

Removal Of The Image Or Blog May Violate U.S. Laws.


Photographer Mark Fisher™ Is 

A Well Accomplished Published Photographer 

In Beauty, Fashion, and Music Photography. 


New York City 

Based Image And Filmmaker

Has A Worldwide Following. 

Is A Member Of The Press. 


There Is Fan Page On Facebook.


 http://www.facebook.com/AmericanPhotographerMarkFisher 


  Commissions Accepted Through Contract


• New York • • Paris • • Milan • • London • 


  Private Client Request Accepted. 


Website www.americanphotographernyc1.com


For More Info Contact 

Green Key Management 


New York, New York 

greenkeym@aol.com 


Thank You  


Flying Portraits • American Photographer Mark Fisher • Royal British Postage

 



Flying Portraits 

• American Photographer Mark Fisher • 

Royal British Postage

Images Of Stamps 

From A Vending Booklet 

Late 60's Maybe 70's

There Four Different 

Pull The Glasses 

Check The Hair Style 

Focus On The Nose 

Look At The Necklace 

A From This Sheet 

There Are Two More

I Have A Few More Of These 

The Same, But, From Different Periods 

Very Cool... 

A Tricky Build 

While Manipulating The Piece

Done During Post Lab 

Released From New York City 




Just Be Creative™



 No Second Usage Without Permission


All Rights Reserved • Models,Actors, Actresses,Dancers,

 Musicians Used In The Web Posts Are Professionals

 and Require Fee For Any Publication or Usage. 

All Have Management. 

Removal Of The Image Or Blog May Violate U.S. Laws.


Photographer Mark Fisher™ Is 

A Well Accomplished Published Photographer 

In Beauty, Fashion, and Music Photography. 


New York City 

Based Image And Filmmaker

Has A Worldwide Following. 

Is A Member Of The Press. 


There Is Fan Page On Facebook.


 http://www.facebook.com/AmericanPhotographerMarkFisher 


  Commissions Accepted Through Contract


• New York • • Paris • • Milan • • London • 


  Private Client Request Accepted. 


Website www.americanphotographernyc1.com


For More Info Contact 

Green Key Management 


New York, New York 

greenkeym@aol.com 


Thank You  









Inside Competition • American Photographer Mark Fisher • Soviet Sports Postage 1981

 




Inside Competition 

• American Photographer Mark Fisher •

 Soviet Sports Postage 1981

A Sponsored Event 

Hockey Games 

∆ 

The Stamp Was Modified 

Design And Structure 

For Cool Look 

Using The The Digital Core 

During Edit 

In New York City 




Just Be Creative™



 No Second Usage Without Permission


All Rights Reserved • Models,Actors, Actresses,Dancers,

 Musicians Used In The Web Posts Are Professionals

 and Require Fee For Any Publication or Usage. 

All Have Management. 

Removal Of The Image Or Blog May Violate U.S. Laws.


Photographer Mark Fisher™ Is 

A Well Accomplished Published Photographer 

In Beauty, Fashion, and Music Photography. 


New York City 

Based Image And Filmmaker

Has A Worldwide Following. 

Is A Member Of The Press. 


There Is Fan Page On Facebook.


 http://www.facebook.com/AmericanPhotographerMarkFisher 


  Commissions Accepted Through Contract


• New York • • Paris • • Milan • • London • 


  Private Client Request Accepted. 


Website www.americanphotographernyc1.com


For More Info Contact 

Green Key Management 


New York, New York 

greenkeym@aol.com 


Thank You