perkeleellinen
Subscriber
Remembering Flickr
I joined flickr first time in 2002, I was an Erasmus exchange student in Sweden and had flat-bed scanned a bunch of darkroom prints before I went, I had the files on a cd. I bought a Sony laptop that year for £1000 and this became my window into the internet which I was only just starting to take seriously. I'm not sure why I didn't think photography and the internet worked but I did think that and only really used the internet for email, illegal music downloads and skateboarding forums. Soon enough I was uploading some scans to flickr and putting them into groups. I also started to get GAS after reading online articles - something that never happened back when I read photo magazines.
I became quite active on flickr for a while joining and contributing to quite a few groups. I was there when flickr superstar Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir (@_rebekka) had her photos ripped and some guy started selling them, her post highlighting this got taken down and caused an uproar. I was there when video came and many users deleted their accounts. I witnessed a young British photographer have her self portrait ripped and used as a cover on a porn DVD. I saw the rise of LomoKev in Brighton using Agfa Ultra 100 and also Toshihiro Oshima using Fuji Fortia. Kevin Mason (@Darkdaze) found a young model called Georgie Hobday who became huge. Some attractive (and quite young) users, playing for views, posted self portraits which attracted very seedy people.
When I went back to Sweden in 2008 I joined a fun group that posted pictures of the city I was living in and we all had to guess the location. That was fun and kept me shooting. By then I had sacked off my DSLR and was paying for lab scans to upload to groups. I bought and sold stuff in groups and got close to some people online. For a few years I paid for a pro account and uploaded thousands of private digital photos of archive material for my PhD research.
I started drifting away around 2010, I became rather alienated from the whole process of getting photos ready for upload and then getting stoked on view counts. Depressing; all that work for a comment like 'nice capture'. I hated all those insane HDR photos and awful attempts at the Orton effect. I was back in the darkroom and had no interest in having photos online.
Recently I've been back and it's a bit like a ghost town with all these absent users, their comments and photos preserved in aspic. You can scroll back to check reactions to Polaroid calling it quits, Ilford in trouble, Fuji's insane decision to cull Reala... It was a real community for a while, now it's dying.
I've been checking out the analogue photo groups on Reddit. A younger crowd, nice to see how they big each other up. The beginners' questions really strike me and the amount of young kids doing film is so good to see. In a sense, it's the kind of spirit which drew me to flickr nearly 20 years ago.