Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Damn lucky grandkids, eh folks? Ted, ya need any more family? You can process my film anytime ya want.....I'm a crotchety ol' fart, but from what you've told me, hell you're so damn old you could be my older brother... Walt On Sat, 5 Dec 1998, Ted Grant wrote: > Bill Cassing wrote: > > >I would appreciate some advice regarding a gift for an eight year old > >grandson.>>>> > > Hi Bill, > > I meant to respond earlier as I have 10 grand children, several of them are > into photography and do it rather well. There are a couple of 13 years olds > with about 6 yaers experience already an other 12 and a grandaughter 11. > > The 4 grand kids I've given cameras they got the simplest and cheapest of > point and shoot's I could find. The simple reason? They just want to take > pictures, they don't want to be fiddling with the things to make a camera > work. Certainly when they first start, just let them expose film and have > fun doing it for the first few rolls. Then as the film is processed and > prints made, you can start with a few "technical and seeing" things. > > Hell they have enough to learn at school without going throough a bunch of > mental stuff to take pictures. Quite frankly most LUG members use their > cameras quickly, to the grandchild it appears very simple, "Just put camera > to eye, click and the picture is taken!" That's how they see us work when > doing our pictures. So what's the big deal here? > > So I let them shoot away to their hearts desire in B&W, I souped the film, > they helped in the darkroom with the timer, buffaloing the contacts through > the soup and dried their own prints. > > Once they had some pictures to look at, then the "why for details" were > brought to play and they learned to see their mistakes and "Keepers," as > they grew older they graduated in gear and ability the two boys in Ottawa > now use their fathers EOS1 cameras and lenses and do a very good picture. > > The one here in Victoria knows how to use my M6, make adjustments and get > acceptable pictures. > > My grand daughter in Jasper is still using the P&S and sends her film here > in Victoria for processing and contacts. I send them and some enlargements > I think worked back to her with new rolls of film. I make some notes to go > with the prints and after she gets them, we talk on the phone discussing > the contacts as I keep a set and she has a set. At times very frustrating > as we are visual people > > She is turning 12 and very much into art and design and shows some > excellent talent, I don't have any doubt some day she could be working as a > commercial photographer. I'll move her up to a more controlling camera > later in the New Year as she is complaining she can't get as close as she > would like and several other points that obviously indicate she is ready > for more than a point and shoot. > > For what it's worth on the first camera for your grandson, I'd by-pass all > the control stuff and just let him "point and shoot" having fun because, > that's how you grab their interest right at the start simply because they > have "some success" and feel good about picture taking like "grandpa" > > More important? They have fun without details! You can do that stuff later. > > Ted Grant > This is Our Work. The Legacy of Sir William Osler. > http://www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant > >