Feliz Navidad y Un Próspero Año Nuevo a Mis Amigos Emoticones
Friday, December 20, 2024
| Christmas 2024
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Old age means that friends and family who were older when I
was younger are all, with few exceptions,dead.
That is why it it pleasant to make and have new friends. One
of them is photographer Ralph Rinke who is a busy photographer making
cyanotypes, platinum prints and photographs on glass.
He came for a visit the other day and brought a lovely
Christmas card made by his wife Susan.
In this scan I am bringing together the cyanotype portrait
of me by Rinke (framed today), Susan’s Christmas card and a flower of the
poinsettia that my friend Tim Turner brings me every year.
I no longer have the heart to put up a Christmas tree so
Turner’s poinsettia and Susan’s card do just wonderfully.
And then there is this (very important) A Smile on a Sombre Day
Mary Cain - City of Vancouver Archive
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
| Mary Cain - circa 1897
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Indigenous Margo
Kane came to my studio a few days ago for her portrait. I had first
photographed her in 2008. The woman who faced me when I opened the door had a
much slimmer face. Kane told me she had had some health problems. | Margo Kane 2008
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As I was
taking her photographs I felt that I had seen someone like her before somewhere else some
years back. I could not remember when or where. In the middle of the night it
came to me that in one of my visits to the Vancouver Archive I had seen an
albumen print (19th century process) of a woman called Mary Cain.
I
decided to go back and at the front desk of the archive I asked to see the
photograph. I was presented the photograph which was carefully kept in an
acid-free envelope. I was granted permission to photograph it. Here it is.
Two Lovely Women & a Cashmere Scarf
Sunday, December 15, 2024
In what now is an evidently long life, I can state that only
two women lovingly wrapped a scarf around my neck.
The first was my Argentine girlfriend Susy who would feed me
Swiss cheese sandwiches and when I was about to leave, she would place a scarf
she gave me around my neck to help me fight off the terrible Buenos Aires
winters.
It was for an assignment in Victoria in the late 80s that in
a windstorm I lost her scarf. I was horribly depressed as the scarf was the
only direct material connection to Susy.
For years Rosemary and I collected scarfs of all kinds and
we even bought a lovely Pendleton one in Seattle. But it was perhaps about 5
years ago that she gave me the softest cashmere scarf. It is my absolute
favourite. As I put it on, its softness is a direct connection to Rosemary’s ever
so feminine softness and grace.
These colder days, when I walk Niño around the block, taking
the same route that Rosemary took with Niño, I feel so very close to her.
I especially remember when Niño lingers at some garden what
Rosemary told me, “Don’t yell at Niño. Be patient.”
With that scarf covering my mouth I would not even think
about it.
Feeling Useful Thanks to Margo Kane
Saturday, December 14, 2024
| Margo Kane - Fujiroid peel - 14 December 2024
| | February 2008
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Without going into details, when minutes before Rosemary died,
she asked, “Am I dying?” I can assert that my small family fractured.
Distractions like reading, taking photographs, scanning
plants and experimenting with new methods by using my scanner help a bit.
The problem is that I no longer feel useful. With that said
I have no doubt that my two cats need me (a friend in need is a friend indeed –
that cliché). If I were to feel suicidal (I am not but I do think about it), I
know I have to wait for Niño and Niña to die. Who would take care of them if
I go first?
Two my granddaughters I am not a grandfather. I am just an
old man.
But there are moments when I do feel some relief. That came
when Margo Kane showed up today for her portrait. She wanted to get a new image
for her Indigenous program being planned for March. I had previously
photographed her in March 2008. The prospect of using the same film camera and
a similar pose 16 years later excited me.
While I used my Mamiya RB-67 with the 90mm lens and 100ISO
film I did take one photograph using my digital camera with the now tried and
true procedure of grossly underexposing
the photograph by using a modelling light and my Fuji X-E3 set at 200ISO, 1/30
of a second and at the strange f-stop f-7.1.The result is an absolute black
rectangle that I then treat with my 20-year-old Photoshop 8. The result has an
odd colour (that I like) and digital noise that resembles that of fast film
grain.
For the other two pictures I took, I used a Polaroid back
for my Mamiya and I shot it with Fuji 100IS) instant film.
In that last century, after peeling the Polaroids we
would throw the peels away. Alas that was a mistake we only corrected this
century with a scanner! The process is to immediately place the peel on the
scanner (if you wait the image fades) and rub it well onto the glass. Once
scanned, I reverse it in Photoshop (or not).
So thank you Margo for making my day and giving me the idea
that I may still be useful.
The Last & the First
Friday, December 13, 2024
| Judy Brown - Mexico City 1962 - Rosemary Healey Waterhouse-Hayward - Mexico City 1968
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Today, 13 Friday 2024, was a pleasant day as I celebrated
with Alexandra, Hilary’s birthday which is tomorrow. We went to our fave
Italian Restaurant, La Piazza Dario, at the Italian Cultural Centre.
As I looked at the candle on our table I immediately had my
idea for today’s blog. It involved two women in my life whom I photographed
with just the light of a candle.
The first one was really my first girlfriend. I was 20 and I
met her at Mexico City College in Mexico City. Her name was Judy Brown. Even
though I was a nerd (before the word had been invented) I remember being daring
enough to ask her to take her to Veracruz to meet my mother. On the bus she was
reluctant for me to put my head on her lap in our bus. She confessed that she
had a boyfriend called Allan in Los Angeles. Her claim to fame was that her
father played tennis with Charles Schulz who created Peanuts.
She went back to LA and I never heard from her again. All I
have are photographs that I took using an extremely fast film called Agfa
Isopan Record with my Asahi Pentax S-3 and a 85mm f-1.8 Komura lens.
In early 1968, after I had married my Rosemary on8
February, I took some photographs of her in the nude. In the contact sheet I
spotted some where I had used a candle. The film was some sort of very fast
Kodak film.
And that is how the last became my real first.
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