Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/09/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Peter Dzwig offered: Subject: > Ted, > > I didn't think you were THAT kind of doctor! ;-) > Have been thinking about it for months, can't make up my mind yet. Hi Peter Naw not one of those wonderful medical-Surgical guys! :-) But an honest to goodness Honorary doctor who took 60 years to qualify for the degree due to recommendations by some folks who thought it was about time I should receive recognition for my years of "happy snapping!" :-) That and an image collection of 280,000 in the National Archives of Canada with another 100,000 in The National Gallery of Canada. They constitute the largest collection by a single photographer in the history of the country. However, I have been known to use a scalpel on a few occasions to assist with the singing abilities of some loud mouth ornery SOB guy! ;-) By the way I learned how to do that kind of "knife work" while shooting my cowboy book and watching, "Old Harry" do his thing on calves with his extremely sharp knife and quick hands! :-) Poor little calf never knew what happened!! :-) And after near 40 years in and out of OR's on assignments and producing my medical books working along side great surgeons you learn just how to cut and thrust carefully! :-) I know very well how to delivery babies.... been there about 200 times shooting, watching, listening to directions and all the necessary interesting thingies. :-) And watched a couple of "father's to be faint!" We just left them on the floor until the important part was finished. :-) One guy put his camera up, looked through the viewfinder at the mother's crotch as the baby was emerging and promptly collapsed to the floor! ... hell he never even went "click! :-) The ruth is.... trust me.... "" THERE ISN'T ANY PICTURE THERE THE MOTHER WOULD WANT TO SEE IN ANY EVENT!" The doc step around him for a few minutes until a couple of nurses dragged him out of the way! :-) I can stand beside a heart surgeon and tell him each and every move in changing a heart valve or doing a by-pass. Big difference doing it and telling how. :-) Just a little side bar thing when you've seen it done enough times and ask interesting questions and the doc is telling you exactly what he's doing! Really cool! :-) But the truth is, it's such a wonderful part of ones life being a photojournalist, you learn something about a lot of things. :-) Besides if you're passion is photographing human beings in action wherever, whenever and whomever during moments of life happenings, so much is learned! Particularly when you love doing what you do with great passion, you really never want it to end!! cheers, ted