good post , listen to this as is good advice.I'm currently going through my old negatives, 10 fat folders of them with a view to putting them in printed books. Currently scanning, spotting and tweaking 1975 - 1980 monochrome. It's a real effort but my only regret is I didn't take more pictures!
The thing is at the time you think people and places will be around forever - they won't. Record them now. Some of the most fascinating shots are throwaway street corner photographs. The hair-dos, clothes, cars, shop fronts, advertisements have gone and sometimes entire areas have been flattened and rebuilt. Even the graffiti is heritage.
The lesson is take more photographs, you won't regret it.
The thing is at the time you think people and places will be around forever - they won't. Record them now. Some of the most fascinating shots are throwaway street corner photographs. The hair-dos, clothes, cars, shop fronts, advertisements have gone and sometimes entire areas have been flattened and rebuilt. Even the graffiti is heritage.
That's exactly the kind of thing not to miss. Familiarity breeds contempt, but the familiar doesn't last very long.With my 30th birthday drawing nearer, I absolutely know what you are talking about! I too regret the many shots not taken and I must say it is often the most trivial things that I wish I had taken pictures of. I often think of my old student´s flat now, which I moved out of about 3 years ago. The alley I walked every day when coming home, the supermarket I went to every evening, the parking lot where my car was parked. All these things seemed so common to me that I never even considered photographing them.
Meh, in 100 years we can check out all of that in google streetview
Seriously though, you're right in that so much of old photos which are the most fascinating are just ones of normal everyday life which don't seem remotely worth taking photos of in the present.
i've been taking photos of my local environemnt in the present for the last 30 years
some of the images are in local libraries some are in my files.
nothing wrong with now .. we live in interesting times
Hmmm... Are you saying we are cursed?...we live in interesting times
not at all, im sayingHmmm... Are you saying we are cursed?
to putting them in printed
I'm currently going through my old negatives, 10 fat folders of them with a view to putting them in printed books. Currently scanning, spotting and tweaking 1975 - 1980 monochrome. It's a real effort but my only regret is I didn't take more pictures!
The thing is at the time you think people and places will be around forever - they won't. Record them now. Some of the most fascinating shots are throwaway street corner photographs. The hair-dos, clothes, cars, shop fronts, advertisements have gone and sometimes entire areas have been flattened and rebuilt. Even the graffiti is heritage.
The lesson is take more photographs, you won't regret it.
I still have all my negs and those from my father,starting with my birther 1954.What a pile of junk we produced early on1Thanks a lot for the advice man, I'm only 18 but already have a big big folder of negs, the feeling of going through them and remembering is jsut awesome, can't imagine how it is with a larger body of work over the years.
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