Argusto
Member
There are times when guests in a darkroom are an annoyance and I do my best to print solo and for the most part I am successful in keeping out my two cats and some disagreeable people. However this morning while attempting to perfect a print that I was burning when suddenly I saw a rather large silhouette with legs and an antenna scampering across the image…evidently a large Florida water bug, lodged between the bulb and the condensers of my Omega , decided on his own initiative to dodge an area that clearly needed burning. To say I was startled would be an understatement as my first reaction was to turn on the white light, thus ruining the print…probably ruined anyway. I am glad it was an 8 X 10 print and not 16 X 20 as it would certainly have given me a heart attack had the monster image appeared before me. Tried in vain to catch the little bugger but it buried itself in a crevice somewhere. This was an affront to my printing skills. He has no business in the darkroom if he does not know how to print…either he is a complete idiot or worse a severe critic of my skills, sabotaging my efforts.
This is taking biodiversity too far when a lowly bug decides to tackle fine art photography and insert himself in in the artistic printing process. I will match my skills anytime against this upstart bug. Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, I am sure, had to deal with one or two bugs in their lifetime …now they have struck me.
I am not a bug racist…while I don’t have any that I would call friends, I have been acquainted with some wonderful l bugs in my lifetime that are courteous and stay outdoors and as long as they mind their own business , I’m OK with that. I expect we humans will be extinct long before they will be and then…only then, can they be allowed to experiment with photography and perhaps even gaining some notoriety.
This is taking biodiversity too far when a lowly bug decides to tackle fine art photography and insert himself in in the artistic printing process. I will match my skills anytime against this upstart bug. Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, I am sure, had to deal with one or two bugs in their lifetime …now they have struck me.
I am not a bug racist…while I don’t have any that I would call friends, I have been acquainted with some wonderful l bugs in my lifetime that are courteous and stay outdoors and as long as they mind their own business , I’m OK with that. I expect we humans will be extinct long before they will be and then…only then, can they be allowed to experiment with photography and perhaps even gaining some notoriety.