Photography
Related: About this forumMy first camera and one of my first photos
I took the photo of my paternal grandmother and father in 1962. Dad bought the camera when he was stationed in Germany with the Army during the Korean War. I was given the camera to use when I was five or six years old.
niyad
(119,901 posts)Thank you for sharing!
Mousetoescamper
(5,141 posts)multigraincracker
(34,075 posts)As a child in 62, I bought a very cheap photo developing kit. Went into a closet and loaded the plastic tank and ran the chemicals through it. I did everything wrong, but it worked. Wish I had saved those first contact photos.
Mousetoescamper
(5,141 posts)Processing one's own film was still a part of the job when I first started working for community newspapers. When I left the business, film had gone the way of the Linotype machine.
multigraincracker
(34,075 posts)enjoy those smells in an X-ray lab.
A few years later when I was 15 I bought an enlarger and made money producing fake IDs for the local college kids.
Have a boring life now.
justaprogressive
(2,447 posts)excellent use of photography skills!
HAB911
(9,360 posts)Mousetoescamper
(5,141 posts)CaliforniaPeggy
(152,083 posts)How lucky you saved all of that.
Thank you!
Mousetoescamper
(5,141 posts)Some of my family photos are more than 100 years old. I've photographed the oldest for preservation. In order to preserve all of the collection I'll need a scanner that will digitize prints, negatives, slides, and home movies.
TeamProg
(6,630 posts)Mousetoescamper
(5,141 posts)Grumpy Old Guy
(3,552 posts)Box cameras were great. Fixed focus, fixed aperture, fixed shutter speed, and B&W film with a lot of latitude. Just stand eight feed away from your subject and use a flash inside. That worked for everything.