jtk
Member
My mother, herself a fine amateur photographer (Bantam Special), taught me to shoot, process, and contact print with 616 Kodak box camera cc 1951. Continued to on-and-off, especially in Newfoundland and, later, at Laguna Seca race track in California. Sports Car Illustrated viewed my Stirling Moss Lotus photos and kindly told me that I needed a long lens to be serious. Later, in exchange for editor's make-out use of my 56' Ford, I was given the college newspaper year book photographer PAYING job. Was handed a Rolleiflex and told to get to work. Made a mess of the newspaper's darkroom, took heat, learned the hard way. In graduate school (research psychology) I audited a couple of design classes taught by Jay Baldwin https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Baldwin. Fellow student, then wife, dragged me to Sierra Club HQ in downtown San Francisco to appreciate Ansel Adams (got to handle dozens of his prints). Visited galleries, immediately abandoned Ansel for Edward Weston. Took a Mendocino Art Center course from Conrad Forbes, a protege of Minor White. Conceptually reverse-engineered "of" and "something more." Was Zen-oriented. Returned to San Francisco and within a year was working with professional photographers every day via Adolph Gasser's and Media Generalists (managing E4 duplication and processing, worked on ) and went nuts around town with black Nikon FTn. cc1970
Slippery slope.
Slippery slope.
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