what do you see like: 2012

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This is most of them, not including my grandma's yearbooks from college, which are inexplicably being stored under about 1000 other things in the basement. The 77 one is somewhere on my bookshelves for easy browsing and to show students because some of them went there.

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8166/7606270264_2a8c0b499a_z.jpg

nicest bitch of poster (La Lechera), Thursday, 19 July 2012 22:59 (thirteen years ago)

Awsomwst Bestest Thing That I Bought Today That I Wish You Could All Come Over And Look At

, Blogger (schlump), Thursday, 19 July 2012 22:59 (thirteen years ago)

I remember that thread. It was before I had a scanner, and I felt like I should chime in, but I never did.

nicest bitch of poster (La Lechera), Thursday, 19 July 2012 23:00 (thirteen years ago)

i fell in love with the 1970 yearbook from my alma matter and later found a copy (with nothing written in it) on ebay for $20-- its heavily influenced by Marshall McLuhan and Medium is the Massage-- i should post scans-- its probably in my top 10 favorite books of all time!!

♆ (gr8080), Thursday, 19 July 2012 23:02 (thirteen years ago)

the most impressive part is probably that all the junior and sophmore photos are either candids or posed like a photo-shoot at places around campus and the FRESHMEN ARE ALL IN GROUP SHOTS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER like, holding hands human-chain style or descending a staircase

its amazing

♆ (gr8080), Thursday, 19 July 2012 23:05 (thirteen years ago)

That sounds great.

Vassar has a pretty good archive on flickr -- I like this 1982 maypole shot for some reason

http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5163/5244216736_c9a123d408_z.jpg

nicest bitch of poster (La Lechera), Thursday, 19 July 2012 23:06 (thirteen years ago)

yeah I think a lot of the film affection is pretty much nostaglia. we like stuff that looks old. the 'look' of film, even when shot now still signals 'old' and thus also kinda hints at 'important' and 'following a long traceable history and tradition'
a lot of mastery of film is I think tied up w mastery of a history-laden aesthetic. I think it also has a lot to do with a desire to send immediate signals that there is something honorable and craftsmanlike about the photographs that (film photographer) makes, compared to those made by (digital photographer).

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:13 (thirteen years ago)

In retrospect those of us using film will probably all look like people who were still working in pictorialism after Evans and Adams etc.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:16 (thirteen years ago)

hah film doesn't necessarily signal 'old' to me - you can use a very modern film like the new portra or acros, tmax. there are hundreds of thousands of very futuristic looking scenes shot on tmax on flickr...

xp with the fracturing of all the arts brought about by ~the internet~ I'm not even sure if there will be a narrative of a tradition, a craft left 20 years looking back! or if there has been a 'the americans' or 'american photographs' moment w/ digital I'm not sure we know about it yet.

dayo, Friday, 20 July 2012 00:25 (thirteen years ago)

I think there's still something in the curves of film that signifies traditional/old. I don't think the kids are into it because of its great dynamic range.
I don't know what the tradition or narrative of photography might be in the future, but I doubt it would be along the lines of the americans, etc.... that seems like exactly the kind of 20th century tradition that a lot of film photography is meant to suggest currently.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:32 (thirteen years ago)

I feel like a lot of really *new* feeling new photography might be more likely to come from the Art World. which totally digs digital and is not about the traditions of documentary photography etc.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:34 (thirteen years ago)

or the digital snapshot world

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:34 (thirteen years ago)

well I meant more along the lines of a paradigm-shifting event in the same vein as the americans was, not necessarily something that mimics the americans essence

dayo, Friday, 20 July 2012 00:34 (thirteen years ago)

I totally shoot film because of its increased dynamic range! *shrug*

dayo, Friday, 20 July 2012 00:34 (thirteen years ago)

idk if people shoot film out of rockist tendencies, I tend to think it's more because it just looks different, cf. the whole lomography movement which is like analog photoshop. cf also the popularity of instagram, hipstamatic, 'filters' and sfx in post processing.

I've said it before on ILP and I think I'm probably a broken record at this point but the way that digital photography is different than film is that in every digital camera, there is a piece of silicon that was manufactured by like one of two or three companies, and everything that comes out looks the same, and film may be an easy way to do that? at least that's the story I have in my head

dayo, Friday, 20 July 2012 00:40 (thirteen years ago)

I lump negative/slide film, instagram, hipstamatic, lomography, polaroid revivalism etc. together. it's all "pictures like mom, dad, grandpa, eggleston, and our favorite old bands used to make" to me
I don't know how the relative similarity of digital camera sensors fits in. I think the end result isn't always that similar maybe because of in-camera processing, sensor size differences, filtering differences, lens differences, etc.?

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:50 (thirteen years ago)

this is all stuff I think about cuz I'm asking myself why I'm using film & old cameras in 2012. am I just being archaic? is the real avant garde work being done by artists messing around with cell phone cameras or point and shoots, or spending massive grands on digital hasselblads? am I just being quaint?

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:53 (thirteen years ago)

not saying I am, but these are the things that worry me

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:53 (thirteen years ago)

is it at all interesting that intro to photography classes at most universities are still opting to have students learn how to shoot + develop 35mm film manually in 2012?

♆ (gr8080), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:56 (thirteen years ago)

it is... I wasn't aware that was still the case!

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 00:58 (thirteen years ago)

I don't know how the relative similarity of digital camera sensors fits in. I think the end result isn't always that similar maybe because of in-camera processing, sensor size differences, filtering differences, lens differences, etc.?

― lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Thursday, July 19, 2012 8:50 PM (11 minutes ago) Bookmark

I tend to feel that all of these factors affect the last 5% - with sensor size being the biggest. in-camera processing means that nikon reds are a bit more saturated than canons, or olympus gets a better balance between blues and greens. filtering differences goes to sharpness that's probably only visible at pixel peeping levels. lens differences, they're all multi-element zooms that are designed by computers w/ high tech coatings that eliminate nearly all flare.

dayo, Friday, 20 July 2012 01:03 (thirteen years ago)

probably the biggest reason to shoot film or w/ old cameras is probably the restraints that come along w/ it, imo. maybe something about not letting the technology or tool overwhelm the picture-taker. there are probably cool ways to use digital that I'm sure exist on some corner of flickr, that will be discovered. idk. like, your sequence shots - seems like those would benefit from the 12-fps burst mode of most digital SLRs?

dayo, Friday, 20 July 2012 01:06 (thirteen years ago)

I don't need that fast! but I do want to get myself a digital camera at some point.
something that fits in the pocket.
get some of those clean smoooooth digital tones. neutral colors. use the flash, blow out some highlights.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:10 (thirteen years ago)

aside from aesthetic preferences and nostalgic tendencies that are def a part of my whole deal w/ film, i just like having to wait a few hours/days/weeks before i get to see what my photos look like!?!? i like coming accross diff types of cameras and odd/expired film and seeing how intere i like having to budget money for film processing, and manage my week so i have time to get to a lab and back etc etc-- it makes it feel like a ~hobby~ in a way that coming home and plugging in a USB cable doesn't?

idk i think i just value experience over craft or quality.

♆ (gr8080), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:17 (thirteen years ago)

should be:

i like coming accross diff types of cameras and odd/expired film and seeing how interesting they can make the same old shit i always take pictures of look

♆ (gr8080), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:18 (thirteen years ago)

idk if people shoot film out of rockist tendencies, I tend to think it's more because it just looks different, cf. the whole lomography movement which is like analog photoshop. cf also the popularity of instagram, hipstamatic, 'filters' and sfx in post processing.

I lump negative/slide film, instagram, hipstamatic, lomography, polaroid revivalism etc. together. it's all "pictures like mom, dad, grandpa, eggleston, and our favorite old bands used to make" to me
I don't know how the relative similarity of digital camera sensors fits in. I think the end result isn't always that similar maybe because of in-camera processing, sensor size differences, filtering differences, lens differences, etc.?

― lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:50 (14 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

this is really interesting, & almost a glass-half-full/half-empty thing, i think. there are a lot of reasons to opt into film as a medium, things you can coopt or align yourself with, so either the venerable old time vibe or the preestablished vocabulary you can learn & successfully, formulaically discharge (flailing flags, transit patrons, photographing the poor, &c). & there's the other thing about any old medium, which is its connotative scent; it's like over the past year or two, how fascinating it has been to see an aura generate around VHS, something which carried no quantifiable aesthetic advantage or seeming distinct quality, which no-one would have elected to use but which now collaterally suggests something - the bleary aesthetic of analogue bleeding into digital, of domestic palimpsest technologies, certain models of receiving images, how we used to operate. because this is also present, in the inverse, in digital images we see - harder to detect, sure, but just the same, a specific look that we're used to, that suggests something to us - you get the other reasons to use film: because it is different from now, rather than because it's the same as then. i know i have mentioned this before so i will try not to beat it into the ground (particularly bc it's kinda a shitty movie), but a while ago i was talking about hannah takes the stairs as an exemplar of things that aren't aesthetically appealing but which totally catch how things look - this cheaply made digital film that just looks like now, in its details - cheap kitchen surfaces, the creases and colours of current clothing - & in the rendering, sorta strip-lit-bleached digital with a muted shine on everything:

http://i.ytimg.com/vi/rv_pDmIO18E/0.jpg

it is the argument for using digital, i think - thinking that it will carry the same evocative aura as film does, irrespective of its visual appeal. presumably if you're using film you're shooting for something less literal, less representational. & that's part of what images even are - whenever i shoot black & white i think it's like building a monument to something, more than it is trying to just record it - & obviously there is gonna be some disconnect between 'how something looked' & 'capturing what it looked like' in successfully representing something - you sometimes want to capture the platonic thing & that means folding a lot into an image, capturing its essence &c&c&c.

it's really interesting thinking about the americans. maybe because of how much is folded up in that moment. like i can't separate it from the immigrant story & mcluhan's wiring of the world & the social fact of it all, like it being not so much about the images but that they were this connective text that had the power to show people stuff (i know they weren't the first recorded photographs or anything, & i'm sure i'm eating some of the myth wholesale here, but i do feel like they had this kinda novel role in chronicling parts of contemporary america, for parts of contemporary america, or at least they had a power to do that & do that retroactively). & what would an equivalent be? something that persuasively connected & communicated between a lot of people, i guess, something that comprehensively understood now. i like the thing frank says about taking risks (in that americansuburbx interview), & feel like that's part of it, that if people are willing to expose enough then they end up with something revealing.

hah film doesn't necessarily signal 'old' to me - you can use a very modern film like the new portra or acros, tmax. there are hundreds of thousands of very futuristic looking scenes shot on tmax on flickr...

this is all stuff I think about cuz I'm asking myself why I'm using film & old cameras in 2012. am I just being archaic? is the real avant garde work being done by artists messing around with cell phone cameras or point and shoots, or spending massive grands on digital hasselblads? am I just being quaint?

― lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:53 (11 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

i think film is too broad for this, pretty much. like maybe i am investing too strongly in the colours are unrealistic in slide film! as a talisman of possibilities, but i still feel like film is a pretty broad field. like what dayo says about there being futuristic images being made; it has so much potential to be weirdly compatible with how we are living now, either like vhs - as a semi-anachronistic but sensual, redolent thing - or just in a million other ways, cf those guys who ate some unexposed film & then processed it, or people who play with infrared to make sci-fi movie pictures, or people who go to whatever lengths to rework other images through film, richard prince style, or whatever. digital must be the medium for having an immediate shortcut to our brain, to how we see and receive images, because it exists with them better than film does, more straightforwardly, w/o interpretation. but whatever degree of abstraction and interpretation is involved in film can be useful, involving. i was thinking about illustration & graphic art, how there was the obvious kinda sasek-y disney WPA era of it existing at its apex, this perfect practiced form. & now it's done again, in a sort of post-modern reappropriation concert-poster reconstruction of that aesthetic. i probably parade my lack of art history credentials around, here, but i feel like things fit with their eras, pretty well - that the best chamber music came from when all the chamber music was being written, that the best stooges-y-kinda records are the ones the stooges wrote. & so it so misunderstands things to try to dip back to the '40s but just picking on what things looked like. i assume all of that stuff was in step with now - with the limits of printing technology, harnessing instruments that had been invented to be able to do things that you needed the instruments to do. i think a retro, reverent idea of using film doesn't work - it's too caught up in the baggage, in just alluding to the past. but i am sure it can be a good way to look at now, just in a different way. made sharper, or bigger, or brighter on computer screens, or in contexts of other photographs.

man this is really long, sorry.
can't wait for the yearbooks!, they sound amazing.

, Blogger (schlump), Friday, 20 July 2012 01:50 (thirteen years ago)

re: your last paragraph, I definitely feel a need to make film work for really contemporary images and needs. which gets back to the folks shooting old cars on old cameras thing which just makes me insane. at the very least, if I'm apparently going to be this guy who walks around with a leica loaded with film, then I'd better photograph things that are part of the current visual landscape. the ugly things of today and not the beautifully worn things of yesterday (which were of course ugly to many people at the time). just trying to escape nostalgia, sentimentality (I fail at this), and gentle anecdotal photography as much as possible. shooting with film makes that a harder challenge, because (and I guess no one's going to change my mind on this) shooting with film really is a nostalgic act. sure it's got a lot of possibility, but I'm convinced that the initial hook is still that it has ties to *history* and the long grand tradition of father figure photographers who wore wristwatches and walked around new york before it was gentrified and documented the working poor or subway riders etc. or took the grand tour around the united states in a possibly futile attempt to capture its essence. i mean, there's just a whiff of hero worship circling around the film photography world. i'm sure it's in the rest of the photography world too, but this is what i've been exposed to. it's the same thing that drives me crazy about 'street photographers' etc.
sometimes i think film photography is just too acceptable! and well-regarded! maybe too many people are too satisfied that it truly is a more expressive medium than digital, which I don't think is even possible.
this is all insecurity talking, fyi.
and I also think it's kind of crazy that people can even have a subject of conversation be the relative virtues of two different methods of capturing a still image! like it's almost actually insane that if one were to look at two totally images, that the capture method would be even remotely towards the top of the list of things to talk about! but then I can't help but get into these kinds of conversations and kind of love them.
-
I'm not sure that if you're shooting with film you're shooting for something less literal/representational by the way. I think there is plenty of digital photography that becomes very abstracted, despite its in-focus digital crispness: http://www.gideonbarnett.com/hope/

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 02:10 (thirteen years ago)

wrote that and didn't review it, so I might have said things that weren't very well thought out or kinda wrong. going to reread the last post though and give it real thought.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 02:10 (thirteen years ago)

for my own good maybe we should outlaw film vs. digital talk on this board!

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Friday, 20 July 2012 02:11 (thirteen years ago)

no way. lots of interesting thoughts here. i rarely read anything interesting on the filmvsdigital debate, mostly samesame gross debates on like rangefinderforum FILM IS GOOD BECAUSE IT'S HARD YOU WANT BE A REAL MAN UNTIL YOU DEVELOP YOUR OWN DARKROOM PRINTS. i have nothing to contribute here, philosophically, because i guess part of the reason i still shoot film is because 1) it's easier for me to make cool pictures because i'm 26 years old and i should be able to but i am mystified by all but the most basic software and i can't figure out how to make digital look like i want pictures to look and i really, really, really don't get any pleasure from the process of computering around with pictures, 2) exactly what gr80 said <i> i like coming accross diff types of cameras and odd/expired film and seeing how intere i like having to budget money for film processing, and manage my week so i have time to get to a lab and back etc etc-- it makes it feel like a ~hobby~ in a way that coming home and plugging in a USB cable doesn't?</i>... i like driving across town to drop off film and the week wait for a roll of film or just the half hour wait at the drugstore and all of those things. i like going to the old camera store on 118th that's open for i think three hours a day and is crammed with random tripods and straps and old nikon slrs and talking to the old guy there.

and as fringe and dying art as film is positioned by camera forum nerds (and yeah honestly i guess it is a nostalgic act still no matter what i'm about to say after this paranthetical aside), i can still get find film as easy as i could find batteries or an sd card for a digital camera and i can still get it developed and scanned in under an hour and i still use film for taking pictures of the same things i take picture of with my phone.

i don't know... i don't really think a lot about the relative virtues of filmvsdigital and a lot of it reminds me of audiophile digital analogue debate that i never got either. but i wrote all this so far to say, it was dope reading what you guys had to say about it. for real.

dylannn, Friday, 20 July 2012 08:11 (thirteen years ago)

post contains admission that the simplest software baffles me, use of html on a messageboard that doesn't support it

dylannn, Friday, 20 July 2012 08:12 (thirteen years ago)

and I also think it's kind of crazy that people can even have a subject of conversation be the relative virtues of two different methods of capturing a still image! like it's almost actually insane that if one were to look at two totally images, that the capture method would be even remotely towards the top of the list of things to talk about! but then I can't help but get into these kinds of conversations and kind of love them.

haha otm; this is how i feel about lenses & hardware talk, too, that it's micro-level compared to any other consideration, eg what a photograph was even of. they do seem super different to me, tbh, probably most legitimately in terms of constraints, like dayo said, or in their look. but then in other ways not. there's a comment under a recent unchanging window post mentioning that she was using an old contax film camera; i hadn't even noticed that the photos weren't digital, like (i assume!) usual, because i wasn't looking at the images like that but in another context.

http://www.unchangingwindow.com/content/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/film-2.jpeg

the gideon barnett site kills, by the way, really amazing. so crisp, strong.

really like your post, dylan. another advantage of film is not having to know shit about digital, or be too concerned with where technological advances in cameramaking are upto (there's a guy who there was a feature on, somewhere, recently, who uses on of the first gen digital cameras & gets really rad, accidentally distorted images, i can't find the link). i wish i could get back into breezily dropping rolls at the chemist though, i have a backlogue & upon picking up a misplaced sense of duty towards scanning, &c. the middleman process - which i think probably counts even if you're the middleman developing your own film - is v satisfying & exciting.

back to famous people: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/15131#ixzz2113vwLEh

, Blogger (schlump), Friday, 20 July 2012 22:56 (thirteen years ago)

just letting you know I've been obsessing over the 1 polaroid a day photographer since you posted it.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Sunday, 22 July 2012 07:04 (thirteen years ago)

oh that's really good. i haven't really spent a lot of time with the archive yet but it looks great. there's something particularly sad, & so poignant, about a guy keeping a lasting, daily photo log dying so young.

http://lh6.ggpht.com/-LOjL1LS8lDo/TCAbaZaAnyI/AAAAAAAAjkw/nJXdmRG8-uk/01-12-82.jpghttp://lh5.ggpht.com/-31fPl88VdVM/TCAbgnxyHQI/AAAAAAAAjkw/sx_clpN8Jko/01-17-82.jpghttp://lh6.ggpht.com/-4XxxSZ6v7qI/TCAdv70GrpI/AAAAAAAAjkw/WXFgsjgpxrY/05-05-82.jpg

^ all 1982.

, Blogger (schlump), Sunday, 22 July 2012 10:15 (thirteen years ago)

Odd that polaroid-a-day thing being posted here. I'm p good friends w/ Hugh Crawford's kid. More a small world observation than anything else.

Grimy Little Pimp (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Sunday, 22 July 2012 23:24 (thirteen years ago)

Hugh Crawford --> compiler/archivist for P-A-D site.

Grimy Little Pimp (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Sunday, 22 July 2012 23:25 (thirteen years ago)

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8001/7627586190_59cae0b2ce_c.jpg

cue "White Rabbit" (kenan), Monday, 23 July 2012 05:45 (thirteen years ago)

Inner. Inner city. Inner city pressure.

cue "White Rabbit" (kenan), Monday, 23 July 2012 05:46 (thirteen years ago)

also teal and orange.xls

cue "White Rabbit" (kenan), Monday, 23 July 2012 05:49 (thirteen years ago)

I like it.

from last week's downpour, that I guess I actually chose to walk around in for an hour or so:

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7251/7625566634_253d2cf2fc_c.jpg

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Monday, 23 July 2012 14:57 (thirteen years ago)

raining fatcats and dogs

, Blogger (schlump), Monday, 23 July 2012 15:08 (thirteen years ago)

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8284/7646694620_8d34e9b59a_c.jpg

Quite pleased with how this scanned, have done very little to the curve in Lightroom.

michaellambert, Wednesday, 25 July 2012 23:03 (thirteen years ago)

Just plain lovely.

cue "White Rabbit" (kenan), Thursday, 26 July 2012 15:43 (thirteen years ago)

it's going to be a bit of a job because my scanner is slow and poorly located, but i started up with the yearbooks.
most recent is 1990, next up 1988
not really sure what people want to see -- sports group photos? snapshots? trying to just choose representative images from the theme of each yearbook rather than stick to a template.

--> real question ---> does anyone know about the legality of posting these images? i put a disclaimer in the description and xxxx'ed out people's names but beyond that, do i need to be worried?

here you go http://yearbookeditor.tumblr.com/

nicest bitch of poster (La Lechera), Thursday, 26 July 2012 16:18 (thirteen years ago)

^^ this is rad btw

http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m7ry56NrDp1rcq6xho1_500.jpg

, Blogger (schlump), Saturday, 28 July 2012 19:54 (thirteen years ago)

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7119/7680358080_6011dbd839_c.jpg

http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8292/7670143864_1be14d113d_c.jpg

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Tuesday, 31 July 2012 12:49 (thirteen years ago)

amazing
the second one is one of the best photos

, Blogger (schlump), Tuesday, 31 July 2012 14:41 (thirteen years ago)

awesome.

eagerly anticipating more "west coast in black & white"

♆ (gr8080), Tuesday, 31 July 2012 16:12 (thirteen years ago)

thanks... top one is miami though!
will prob be back in the bay area for family reasons soon enough.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Tuesday, 31 July 2012 16:17 (thirteen years ago)


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