Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/08/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted wrote: "1/ Never throw any material away you might not be too happy with today..." "2/ Store negatives very carefully..." You can never be too careful! Especially when you are moving, or travelling. I divide my "career" in two periods, before 1985 and after. When I moved to France that year, all my belongings disappeared, burned, among other things, books, cameras, lab equipment, and several thousand negatives and prints. I have never really recovered from this event, just found a way of living with it. It opened my eyes with regard to the relative unimportance of things, but also with regard to taking care of the essential. I still have some of the images in my brain, but it is difficult to share them. It is impossible to remake any of them, so that is not even a project. I should like to return to some of the places though. Sixteen months in Lebanon during the civil war, and Israeli invasion is rather difficult to bring back. Also the hunger catastrophe in South Sudan in 1982-83. Those images are among the ones I miss most of all. I started looking for negatives and prints left around during the years, but didn't find many. The most interesting discovery was some of my first pictures at the age of 13-14. There must have been about 50 negatives, 6x9, made with a Super Ikonta or a Voigtlaender. I don't remember. I spent several days in the darkroom rediscovering the "world" as it once was. It was amazing to see all those forgotten scenes reappear in the dark. I have become rather maniac about keeping, taking care of, and stocking negatives after this. I don't throw away any! All of them are documents, even if not all of them are interesting, or "good" at the moment. I think I have said it before: images are like wine, they are getting better with the time. Don't waste your memory! Oddmund