I Am the Camera with Dean Putney (Episode 48)

exc-52755ec4e4b0c2eac22c93b7

 

 

Photo by  heysanford .    
Photo by  heysanford .    

Photo by heysanford.

 

 

Dean Putney has made some of your favorite things on the Internet. He’s Boing Boing’s software developer, as well as filling your mind with the best animated GIFs on the Internet.

But what he’s working on at the moment takes us over 100 years into the past: a book of photographs his great-grandfather took before World War I, and in the trenches as a German soldier. He recently funded the book project on Kickstarter, and shares lessons in publishing and crowdfunding. (You can still pre-order the book even though the Kickstarter is over.)

Sponsors & Patrons

This podcast is made possible through the support of sponsors and patrons. Thanks to Stack for sponsoring this episode! Stack sends you a different magazine every month, selecting from among the best English-language publications in the world. With coupon code DISRUPT13, 3 months is $45 (normally $50), and a full year is just $170 (normally $190)!



 

Stack: The world’s best independent magazines directly to your door every month

 

 

And thanks to our patrons, supporting us by pledging an amount via Patreon for each episode we produce. Thanks this time to Ready Chi and GravityFish! You help make it all happen. 

Show notes

David Karp was about 17 when Marco Arment went to work for him, not knowing quite how young he was. Nitrate film stock is highly flammable and degrades horribly unless stored in perfect conditions. It wasn’t until the 1950s that all movie film stock was replaced with cellulose triacetate. (Which also isn’t stable, but is less dangerous. Now they use polyester.)

Just for clarity about which armed force that Dean’s great-grandfather belonged to: The German Army in World War I was the culmination of Prussian consolidation of the country in 1879, and was dissolved after Germany lost the war in 1919. The WWII army was the Heer, the land component of the Wehrmacht, which lasted from 1935 until 1945, when Germany lost WWII. The Wehrmacht was separate from the Waffen-SS, which was a more directly controlled arm of the Nazi party.

The Daily Mail ran a wonderful, lengthy article about Dean’s project. They’re a little right-wingy, and supported Hitler and the Nazis in the 1930s. So did a fair number of English, though, especially in the ruling class.

Pocket Pal is the very, very best source for understanding the technical production details of pre-press (the stuff you do in making layouts and images that work and turning them into something that can be printed) and press production. It will help you understanding the difference between continuous-tone images (actually different shades of gray, such as on an screen or using a dye-sublimation printer) and halftone images (in which tiny clusters of dots fool the eye into seeing different shades). (I co-wrote three editions of a book on pre-press and images: Real World Scanning and Halftones.)

Dean and his friend Dan Shapiro spent many hundreds of hours discussing their Kickstarter campaigns before launch. Dan’s Robot Turtles raised $630,000 towards a $25,000 goal! He has about 15,000 copies of the game to make and ship. Kicktraq is a useful and free way to track information about any Kickstarter campaign, although its early extrapolations of the total amount to be raised aren’t very accurate — it doesn’t factor in early acceleration slowing down.