Mainecoonmaniac
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I remember Andy Warhol used to pickup other people's unclaimed photos at drug stores. Collecting vernacular photography is fun.
Hi,<BR><BR>If anyone is interested, I have thousands of 1950's and 1960's original color and black and white 2 1/4" x 2 1/4" negatives. Images taken by contributing photographer to Life Magazine.
I remember Andy Warhol used to pickup other people's unclaimed photos at drug stores. Collecting vernacular photography is fun.
... one is the courthouse in Vancouver, WA, and the other is a semi-rural landscape from somewhere in the Portland/Vancouver area.
...
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Hi all,
I really enjoy to buy some old negatives on some flea market or on auctions, and then develop them in a darkroom... it is like time traveling. Also when I buy some old camera and as a bonus I get some old negative inside: it is great (one example from agfa isolette attached).
Anyone else has this "hobby"?
cheers,
... hundreds of glass plates from the 1890's down in California ... most I think in the LA area. Very little can be identified as to location, at least by me. There are images of the Santa Monica Pier. There are a very few (disappointing, that is!) of LA streets with NO CARS! It's a very mixed bag. But fascinating nonetheless. ...
I don't do it but there is a fairly active community of people that do this. Yard sales, estates sales and eBay are loaded with old negatives that people are looking for the next Vivian Meier.
I once bought a folder at an antique shop solely to get the roll of film in it (they wouldn't sell it separately). Nothing of enormous interest on that one, just a couple of exterior shots of someone's house.
But I once bought a box of IR sheet film that must have been from the late 40s (it said "Develop by June 1950"), and it turned out to have a couple of exposed sheets in it. (I *think* they were undeveloped, but of course I didn't see them until I'd put them through development myself and they didn't have anything like the images I'd tried to shoot.) They were pretty decent, apparently shot with a Speed Graphic or something similar (you can see the bed in one shot); one is the courthouse in Vancouver, WA, and the other is a semi-rural landscape from somewhere in the Portland/Vancouver area. The rest of the box appears not to have been used---I developed a few additional sheets just to check, but they were blank.
-NT
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I wonder what kind of right do we have on those photos we bought as either negatives or slides at estate sales?
...probably quite unremarkable at the time, but this unwitting 'testimony' becomes a valuable record. What survives a photographers death is quite haphazard with variable effort to 'secure' imagery for the future. I quite recently digitised a set of flea-market bw negs - some most interestingly of pre ww2 Germany in the town of Rothenberg. I think they were passed on to the town archivist.I have been hunting and collecting old exposed film rolls for years and developing them to reveal their stories. It's part of my Lost Exposures project which you can read about here: Dead Link Removed
No matter how old the images are, there is a timelessness about the people's behaviour, their connection to family, their sense of place and the desire to preserve memories. It's so beautiful to witness. View attachment 185432 View attachment 185433 View attachment 185434
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