A Good Day
Ken Nadvornick

A Good Day

By now severely dementia-impaired, she nevertheless instantly rallied when she recognized the 8x10 camera I had set up on the deck. No questions about what it was. At her age she knew a bellows camera when she saw one.

[I]"You're going to take my picture."[/I]

She's always loved being photographed. After the war years she acted as an extra in Bob Hope movies. Lots of people did that. Pay was a few dollars per day and a coveted free lunch.

[I]"You betcha. Is this a good day?"[/I]

One of the very few blessings of dementia is the unavoidable fact that ignorance is bliss. One has good days and bad days. But sometimes it's hard to tell which are which. This day she set me straight.

[I]"Every day you can still take my picture is a good day."[/I]

I somehow managed to quickly expose six sheets that afternoon. That's all she could hang on for. I'm not a very fast and polished large format portrait photographer. Afterward we sat and talked for half an hour about earlier times until fatigue began to rob her of her short-lived clarity.

Of the six sheets, I like this one best. Missed the merging of her hair. But love her expression of seemingly sly determination. She was right, of course. Mom always is. It was indeed a good day.

She passed away January 18th at 86 years of age.
Location
Snohomish County, Washington State, USA (August, 2013)
Equipment Used
Calumet C1 8x10, 305mm f/9 G-Claron, Sekonic L-398 incident meter, Zone VI heavy-duty tripod
Exposure
1/15 sec at f/22
Film & Developer
Ilford FP4+ at EI125 in Adox Adonal (1+50) for 15 min at 68F/20C
Paper & Developer
Negative scan
Lens Filter
Lee Soft Effect #3
Very natural pose, she seems very content. Your photo of her is the same, well done. I even like the plant to the side, to me it adds to the photo, even though it is slightly distracting. I guess that is because she is also compensating for it. So sorry she is gone, she looks like a wonderful lady, she had a wonderful, friendly face.
 
I love this picture it moves me and fills me with feelings of empathy for the lady, we all get old and this picture really says something about the human condition, I wish more people would take pictures like this that say something rather than obsessing about their equipment.
 
Seriously wonderful portrait, raised in importance due to her passing. Time has a profound effect on our photographs, as well as us humans. I'm sorry to hear she's no longer with you, Ken. She seemed like a bright light of human spirit, and I'm sure you appreciate it more than anyone. Peace to you and your family.

I also want to echo Ben's comments about making meaningful photographs.
 
I'm sorry for your loss, Ken. This is a wonderful portrait and I know you'll be even happier you did this in years to come. She looks like she smiled a lot. Her eyes are what hold you in and, to me anyway, that's why the plant doesn't matter at all. I love her line - "Every day you can still take my picture is a good day."
 
So much life in those eyes. Fabulous, Ken. In so many ways. It belongs over the fireplace.
 
Condolences to you and your family Ken. You've captured the full essence of her spirit in this portrait.
 

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