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Mousetoescamper

(3,434 posts)
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 02:52 AM Apr 3

My 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.

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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My first camera and one of my first photos (Original Post) Mousetoescamper Apr 3 OP
Nice photo, and what a lovely piece of family history! niyad Apr 3 #1
Thanks! Mousetoescamper Apr 3 #5
Great photo and memory. multigraincracker Apr 3 #2
Thanks! Mousetoescamper Apr 3 #6
Wasn't that long ago, you could multigraincracker Apr 3 #9
hahaha justaprogressive Apr 6 #14
Beautiful! HAB911 Apr 3 #3
Thanks! Mousetoescamper Apr 3 #7
Beautiful bit of family history, my dear Mousetoescamper! CaliforniaPeggy Apr 3 #4
Thanks and you're welcome! Mousetoescamper Apr 3 #10
Wow! Fun. nt TeamProg Apr 3 #8
Thanks! Mousetoescamper Apr 3 #11
Wonderful photos, thanks for sharing. Grumpy Old Guy Apr 4 #12
Thanks! If I could find 120 film I'd take it out of retirement. It's been more than 50 years. Mousetoescamper Apr 5 #13

multigraincracker

(32,759 posts)
2. Great photo and memory.
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 05:21 AM
Apr 3

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

(3,434 posts)
6. Thanks!
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 12:04 PM
Apr 3

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

(32,759 posts)
9. Wasn't that long ago, you could
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 12:09 PM
Apr 3

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.

Mousetoescamper

(3,434 posts)
10. Thanks and you're welcome!
Wed Apr 3, 2024, 12:21 PM
Apr 3

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.

Grumpy Old Guy

(3,189 posts)
12. Wonderful photos, thanks for sharing.
Thu Apr 4, 2024, 04:55 PM
Apr 4

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.

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