You squinted through a small viewfinder, took a photo, wound on the film using a small crank, and then took another photo.
But not just any photo. Oh no. You would choose your subject carefully and frame it just so, because you would only get 24 or 36 photos on each roll.
Am I sounding old and nostalgic? Excellent, I'll continue...
When you got back from your trip, you would take your rolls of film to a photo-developing shop where the staff would develop the negatives and print your photos onto paper (usually glossy) over 24 hours whilst having a good chuckle at your rubbish photography skills and a good perv at your beach snaps.
The wait to collect your photos was excruciating and delicious. Would they be as amazing as you expected them to be? Or would they be a murky mess because somebody opened the back of the camera too soon? Or the flash didn't go off? Or you were standing at the far side of a rock concert and the only thing you illuminated was the left ear of the tall git in front of you.
Whatever the result, it would be a surprise. It was exciting.
The next delight was choosing which photos to put in a photo album. And in which order. A few hours later your photos would be lovingly sealed beneath a clingy film or carefully wedged into slits inside a large hardback album.
Et voila! A book of happy memories.
Fast forward to today and my photos, which number in their thousands without the limitations of film, are mere digital files scattered across SD memory cards, my laptop, an external hard drive, my mobile phone and numerous social media websites.
Frankly, it's a mess.
I can never recapture the suspense of waiting for my photos to be developed; I have seen all of my digital photos a mere moment after taking them.
But I can still experience the pleasure of choosing which photos to put in an album, and in which order.
I know that many people these days upload their digital photos onto websites that print them directly into books.
I haven't done that. Not yet.
What is your wish of the month? What do you wish you could do by the end of January?
Excellent wish Richard. I've done this for 2014. I bought a pocket page album and I've selected eight photos which sum up each month for me. Now Nick & I can flick through the album and see a brief summary of our year in photographic form. So much better than trawling through hundreds of digital ones. Good luck with this month's venture :). Px
ReplyDeleteThank you, sounds like you're well on top of this already Paul. Is it tough to select just 8 photos per month? I've got a shocking backlog of photos. If I can compile them in one place, and then print one album's worth, I'll be happy. x
ReplyDeleteYes, great wish this month Richard. Coincidentally had the same idea myself and bought a photo album just the other day! I also bought a throw-away camera last year and started taking some pictures on it - so hopefully I'll finish that this year for my new album ;) Good luck with this month's challenge! - will look forward to seeing the results. Jo x
ReplyDeleteGreat minds! Thanks Jo, can't wait to see your finished album too. x
DeleteGreat idea. My boyfriend is into photography and he had his best pictures printed up as a photo book http://tinyurl.com/k8us5rg
ReplyDeleteCheers, yes a photo book has crossed my mind. I can see the appeal. :-)
Delete