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Monday, 31 March 2025

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"35mm film photography to become obsolete! Back in those days, I couldn't quite see that happening.

Of course it did happen, eventually"

Not sure about that obsolescence. Seems to me, more and more films are being produced (of course, not compared to the 1980s), some moviemakers are shooting on film, young photographers are using film, and there is a new enthusiasm for the "obsolete" photon recording medium.

I have always been jealous of Michael Kenna's ability to stick with his Hasselblad and darkroom printing at the same size for his entire career.
I often think I would have been financially and artistically better off to stick to what I used in 1975, I'm not sure my current output is any better. Wow, that's a reality check to admit that. Not sure I enjoy it anymore either.

Though it is pretty fast Mike, 'auto focus' is still eclipsed by 'zone focus', as ably demonstrated by Hasselblad, Leica and the Nikon rangefinder cameras.

Battlefield weapons use it to this day.

Yoots on the big screen: My Cousin Vinny

There's lot of discussion going on in science about the nature of consciousness and many specialist in physics and neuroscience affirm that, according to evidence, we can't have free will. Life is a movie projected in our skulls by whatever process is going on in our brains (sounds like the ancient platonic myth of the cavern, in new clothes).
Your reminiscence made think about that, about our free will and the narratives we use to make sense of the world and of our lives. Because, as a mexican poet once said, humans can tolerate everything, except lack of sense (which reminds me of Man's search for meaning, by Viktor Frankl).
And of course, your text reminded me of The road not taken, and I remembered a nice peace in The Paris Review, that searches for the true meaning of that poem. It may interest you: https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2015/09/11/the-most-misread-poem-in-america/

Of all the futures that never were, thinking about a particular photographic style/gear setup is probably the most harmless/least depressing! I grew up poor, and, though into the visual arts, didn't get far with photography since all the cameras that were ever in the house were cheapo plastic zoom lens compacts which broke easily. Other than having us pose for Olan Mills portraits, my parents weren't much into photographing, which I still find strange and unfortunate. I pivoted to a 2mp Olympus digital camera in 2003, and eventually a beginner DSLR.

I often wonder how my skills and style would be different if I'd had a good 35mm SLR and the money to buy film and get it developed (or my own darkroom! Not likely - big family, small house) when I was a teenager (mid-late 1990s).

Probably I'd just have been even sadder to watch the careers a photographer could live off of dry up once the internet and social media got into full swing.

I had never heard of Nicholas Nixon.
I checked the wikipedia article on him.
After reading it, the allegations against him seem prudish and ridiculous to me.
He is a wokeness victim.

Welcome to my world. I've been shooting 35 mm film nonstop since 1993, printing in a darkroom with black borders, etc, the whole bit. Digital schmigital, lol. The world has moved on. Me? Not so much.

Hmm. Last fall I was able to visit Paris, Bruges, and Rotterdam (I tagged along on one of my wife's business trips). Naturally, (Paris!) I decided that I needed to take a Leica and 35mm Tri-X (as I had done on earlier trips to Europe) and pay homage to the great 20th century French photographers.
However, the budget did not extend to a Leica, and I took my 38-year-old Nikon FM2, and my phone of course. It was an interesting experience, photographically. I enjoyed it, adventures and picture-making both, and I'm slowly making actual 8x10" enlargements on actual photographic paper. Because that's what I do.
And although they are good vacation pics, and I'd show them to anyone, my tech choices were not a 'magic bullet', and Cartier-Bresson, Kertesz, Turnley, et al. have nothing to fear from me. Still, it was good to stay connected to my practice of almost 50 years, and I'm glad I did.

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