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Another previously unknown street photographer surfaces, Frank Oscar Larson from NYC

Somewhere...

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Somewhere...

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Iriana

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'They're in possession of "several thousand historic negatives hidden from sight for 55 years,"'

55 years!

What storage format could I choose *right now* that would be readable 55 years from now with just simple common sense storage?

That's right: silver gelatin.
 
Enjoyed the pictures. I don't live to far only an hour or so planing to see the show.
 
These are interesting snapshots of a point in time, but they don't strike me with the same feeling of greatness like some other recently discovered street photographs. Interesting nonetheless, thanks for posting it.
 
These 'newly discovered' photographers can only get worse, as everyone starts digging around their attics. Does it always have to be a great American city in the fifties or can boring British towns in the fifties also fit the bill?
 
What storage format could I choose *right now* that would be readable 55 years from now with just simple common sense storage? That's right: silver gelatin.

Great point. Keep them dry and you're good to go.

Digital asset management is one of the biggest hidden costs of digital photography. Not only in hardware, but in TIME. One of my time saving goals for the year is to get another studio assistant who can sit there and take care of all that time wasting work. People think the darkroom is tedious - jeez, sitting at the computer, retouching, managing files, uploading to the lab, now that's tedious.

It's amazing how quickly you can put your hands on a negative, even in the absence of a formal filing system. Open up a binder, flip a few pages and there it is!
 
Thinking the Vivian Maier works made a whole lot bigger impression.
 
Batwister, bring on that "boring British town", and we will take a look! :smile:
 
These are wonderful. That photograph of the sailors getting photographed is really interesting. Thanks for the share!

Batwister, I sure hope more and more of these closet photographers get discovered, would love to see a Brit
 
These 'newly discovered' photographers can only get worse, as everyone starts digging around their attics. Does it always have to be a great American city in the fifties or can boring British towns in the fifties also fit the bill?


No it doesn't, but what's stopping you from walking around where you live documenting life with photography?
 
Batwister, will this whet your appetite?:
"The extraordinary story recounted in this book opens at a market junk stall in Yorkshire with the discovery, quite by chance, of a family collection of several hundred Victorian and Edwardian [glass] photographic negatives." That's the introduction on the dust jacket of a book I picked up in a secondhand bookshop a year or two ago. It's titled "A Richer Dust, Echoes from an Edwardian Album" by Colin Gordon, who found the boxes of negs in 1975, cobbled together some kit to print them and did a heap of research into the family and the photographer. It's a fascinating read, published in 1978 by Book Club Associates. You might be able to track it down through your local library. I see there's a copy for sale at AbeBooks.co.uk. Google throws up more.
 
The photographs are interesting for what they are. I do not think they are necessarily museum quality work.
 
If I had to choose frames from the original link: 3, 5, and 6.
 
Thinking the Vivian Maier works made a whole lot bigger impression.

Right. Her pics were a revelation. Her tortured mind produced some extraordinary beauty in patterns of light and dark. Now everyone's digging in their uncle's attic.
 
other than a sense of oooh-look-at-their-funny-clothes I really don't see these making much of an impact.
that being said, I'm sure they are keeping the best for the show, right? right?


hmmm, I wonder if those 6 negs I found in an abandoned horse-racing track in Vienna will be worth anything...
 
Please explain. Do you mind read the dead?

Thank you, tortured was a poor choice of word and beyond what I really meant. From the bio info people have been able to gather and from statements of people who knew her, she was quite eccentric, a loner who seemed to retreat further into herself in her later years. Far from being Teddy Kaczynski, but I could see neighborhood kids calling her the crazy woman who lives down the street.
 
other than a sense of oooh-look-at-their-funny-clothes I really don't see these making much of an impact.
that being said, I'm sure they are keeping the best for the show, right? right?


hmmm, I wonder if those 6 negs I found in an abandoned horse-racing track in Vienna will be worth anything...


Burn 5 of them and you'll be sitting on a gold mine...
 
Thank you, tortured was a poor choice of word and beyond what I really meant. From the bio info people have been able to gather and from statements of people who knew her, she was quite eccentric, a loner who seemed to retreat further into herself in her later years. Far from being Teddy Kaczynski, but I could see neighborhood kids calling her the crazy woman who lives down the street.


I'll accept eccentric, since that is clearly an opinion based on external observations.
 
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