ChatterBank1 min ago
The relevance of Jack.
Harold E. Edgerton. A photographer taking high speed photos of things which you might not see. He did that photo of milk dropping and forming a coronet, and the football being kicked and bending utterly out of shape. I'm sure you know of his pictures.
He also took a photo of a playing card being shot in two. It is called cutting the card quickly. But there are at least 2 versions of this photo. Both times the Jack, but of different suits, so it couldn't be to try to get a replica. Why the Jack?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by flashpig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sorry, I do not know why "Jack of Hearts" (B+W, 1960) was 'repeated' using the Jack of Diamonds in "'Cutting the Card Quickly" (Colour, 1964) but here are the photos to jog some memories.
Thank you for that link. I was thinking about him and "How to Make Applesauce at MIT" tonight (called bullet through apple here, which is the correct title?), and all I could find with the google image search was low quality rubbish.
Perhaps Jack has no relevance at all, but he did 2 versions of 'Milk drop coronet"...