Midway through the 1960s I was looking for a career change. I enrolled in a commercial photo course given by a school in New York's financial district. Toward the end of the program, I bought a boxy case to hold the matted photos I had made during the course, and I took that on job interviews. I did get a few job offers, but the ultimate outcome of the undertaking was that I decided I did not really have much of an aptitude for a career in photography. I did learn some useful things about photography, however, and I liked the pictures I made from that time.The negatives from my photo school days were all lost over the years, but I did hold onto my portfolio case with some of the mounted prints I had kept.
I was nearly ready for retirement when I finally got back to doing some more photography. I shared some of my early digital work on Photo.net and I decided to make some copies of my New York pictures to put on line as well. At the time I did not want to cut up the big matte boards on which I had mounted several projects, so I just made digital pictures of the individual photos using a primitive Epson digital camera. That seemed a good idea at the time, but looking at the pictures on Photo.net years later I saw that the images were very small and of rather poor quality.
I decided that I would like to have some better digital copies of my early work, so I set aside my nostalgic qualms about cutting up the mattes so that I could copy the individual prints on my Epson flatbed scanner. The outcome would have been better had I held onto the original negatives, but the new digital copies are quite a bit better than the ones I made originally with the little digital camera. The photos in this series were made with a Nikon S rangefinder camera. The film was likely Tri-X. The pictures were shot over a period of several weeks on the streets of New York's Chinese community.
I was nearly ready for retirement when I finally got back to doing some more photography. I shared some of my early digital work on Photo.net and I decided to make some copies of my New York pictures to put on line as well. At the time I did not want to cut up the big matte boards on which I had mounted several projects, so I just made digital pictures of the individual photos using a primitive Epson digital camera. That seemed a good idea at the time, but looking at the pictures on Photo.net years later I saw that the images were very small and of rather poor quality.
I decided that I would like to have some better digital copies of my early work, so I set aside my nostalgic qualms about cutting up the mattes so that I could copy the individual prints on my Epson flatbed scanner. The outcome would have been better had I held onto the original negatives, but the new digital copies are quite a bit better than the ones I made originally with the little digital camera. The photos in this series were made with a Nikon S rangefinder camera. The film was likely Tri-X. The pictures were shot over a period of several weeks on the streets of New York's Chinese community.
DAY
NIGHT
redoing the past
Reviewed by Unknown
on
August 30, 2017
Rating:

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