Saturday, July 31, 2021

A Book and a Drink

 I was determined to go "out in the field" and make photographs with the #13 Black Cat Liberator yesterday.  By the time I was "out there," it was hot.  It was really hot.  It may get hot in the west, but there is a different gravity to the sun here.  It is an actual pressure and can knock you down.  Madmen and Englishmen, as they say, are the only ones to go out in the noonday sun.  

But I did. 

I put everything in the car and headed off on a well-known circuit.  I would stop here and there and make some pictures.  I only had four sheets of film to shoot.  That is all the developing tank will take and that was the number of empty film holders I had.  Simple.  

Except it wasn't.  It was too bright for the camera.  The reason to use this particular camera is that the lens opens up very wide (f2.5--super wide for large format) and gives the images a look that you can't get with other camera/lens combos.  But they don't make film that has a sensitivity to allow that camera to work in bright light.  I tried to find things in shade, wait for clouds, etc.  But it was hot.  Really hot.  I drove and stopped, got out the big camera, put it away, drove and stopped, got out the big camera. . . . And then I gave up.  

I went back to my house and made the drink you see above.  And as I sat outside with it, the UPS truck arrived.  The day had come.  


The book arrived.  The first shock--a white cover.  I hadn't even thought of that as I wasn't given a choice of colors as far as I know.  I, of course, always pictured black.  I will go back and see if I can change that today.  Inside, the images are fine but a little cooler than I would like.  It might be the paper stock.  I am going to upgrade to a matte finish and see if that will make a difference.  I've also decided to edit out some of the photos.  There are too many, and with the book in hand, I can make editing decisions more easily.  I am changing the introduction to the book as well.  

But this is a good start.  The book is 8.5"x 8.5" and is a good size, I think.  I made it square so that all images had the same borders no matter if they were oriented portrait or landscape.  It was a good decision.  

I didn't make the book so that I could have a copy lying around the house, of course.  I made it to send around trying to promote myself to galleries and real book companies.  It is scary and weird, I have to admit.  Very.  

Through the magic of Photoshop, I just made a mock up of what it will look like. 


That's the ticket!  And it should have a linen finish.  When this is done, I will let you know.  Some people have said they want a copy, so I will make it available to any readers who want one.  I won't get any money from it.  It is a souvenir, of sorts, that I will give to those who have been reading the blog, something to take with you when I'm gone.  

If you want. I will give you details when it is ready.  

I didn't get to sit with the book for very long.  It was time for me to hurry back to my mother's to make dinner.  It would not be a Sushi Friday, but that was o.k. I would make something tasty and good and there would be the scotch after dinner.  That would be enough, as they say.  Well. . . Hemingway. . . with irony.  

What I need today is some human to use my camera on.  I need a human.  I haven't any in my life who is not related to me, and I don't wish to be an autobiographer.  So. . . more objects, more things.  Maybe one day I'll make a breakthrough again.  

Friday, July 30, 2021

I Don't Want to be Old Anymore


Jesus. . . I wish I had taken that photograph.  It was done with a large format camera and a great lens, I know.  The Duke was a handsome fellow in his youth, but that is the road to Hollywood, ain't it?

I am a miserable fuck, and I don't want to be old anymore.  I am seething with anger and something else.  

Yesterday, I had a confrontation with a bicyclist.  At the stop light, he pulled up beside me and started in.  Said I had gotten too close to him.  I told him that it was the other way 'round, that he had changed lanes as I came by.  He said something stupid, and then I got heated.  I called him names.  He told me something, something, something. . . "Grandpa."  I told him, "Cocksucker, when I get out of the car, you are going to get the shit kicked out of you by Grandpa you little shitwad turd!"  

What the hell is wrong with me?  My anger overwhelms all sense.  

He declined the invitation.  We sat at the red light a long time.  I felt badly.  I pulled up and rolled down my window.  

"Listen, man. . . I was run over while riding my Vespa.  I don't want to hurt anyone.  I know how it feels."

But he was done with me.  Fuck, I thought.  I wanted to get out and beat him.  

Down the road, I felt very badly.  

Later in the day.  When I took my mother to therapy, we got into the elevator.  She didn't push the button.  I stood there.  She stood there.  Nothing happened.  I watched her.  I wanted to know how long she would stand in a stationary elevator.  Turned out to be a long time.  After awhile, she said, "We're not going anywhere."  I asked her if she thought the elevator would automatically take to her destination floor.  She looked at me quizzically.  It took awhile.  I asked her if she had pushed the button.  She was very upset.  

"Why do you have to treat me like that?" 

I watched her during therapy.  I said nothing.  She is an old hillbilly woman.  Nothing to be done, but it makes me sad.  

And something else.  

Her neighbor brought over some food she had made for my mother.  She sat down.  To talk.  And talk.  She likes to tell stories, but they have no point.  They are all about her.  I wasn't as nice as I have always been.  

After therapy, I took my mother grocery shopping.  She wanted to go to Aldi's.  Have you been to Aldi's?  I am not good at Aldi's.  It is a store for morons always in some awkward part of town.  I'm not against poverty, but I have a problem with stupid.  Oh. . . I know.  The fruit and vegetables are good and cheap, but I wouldn't let my mother buy any of the meat.  I was irritated from the get-go.  We had to pay a quarter for the use of a cart.  We got it back, however, when we took it back.  WTF?  

I was losing it at that point.  

For dinner, I made a frozen pizza.  "Cheat night," I said.  I fried eggs to put on top.  When I served my mother, she said the egg wasn't cooked.  The yoke was runny.  She didn't eat runny yolks.  

After dinner, I poured a scotch and put on a video about the Neue Gallerie.  She wan't interested.  I put it on the Medicare Channel and told her to watch Matt Dylan.  That is what she is doing now.  

I am about to go mad.  I don't want to be old anymore.  

At the gym, there were two beautiful, fit girls who I see there almost daily.  I don't look.  Never look.  Nothing can make you out to be a creep like looking.  But I can tell.  They keep me in the periphery of their vision.  How?  Well. . . maybe they are in mine.  The taller one, however, was looking at me directly. She smiled.  We spoke pleasantly.  

"Grandpa."

For whatever reason, I thought of Sam Shepard.  Somehow, I thought, he would understand.  

I get a copy of my book for perusal today.  Vanity Press.  But. . . I can send it out for rejection.  That is supposed to be some sort of valediction.  So they say.  

Once it is in my hands, I will let you know.  

* * *

I slept through the night without taking anything to help me sleep.  I should say I didn't get up, not even once.  I woke during the night several times, however, in flagrante delecto.  I was dreaming of women, some I know, some I don't.  It went on all night long.  Oh, how lovely life can be in dreams.  Obviously I won't go into details.  Other people's dreams, etc.  But I think it was the incident at the gym that did it.  

I've decided to lose weight and regain my youth.  Ha!  

I don't want to be old anymore.  

Thursday, July 29, 2021

Danger in Desire

 I should call this blog "The Milk Can and Wheelbarrow Diaries."  But here is the photo I took with the weird brass lens on a glass plate and what I wrote about it on some Large Format Photography sites.

Experimenting. I have an old brass lens that I bought fifteen years ago on eBay before I knew anything at all about large format photography. I still don't know what the lens is. I pulled it out and put it on a 4x5 studio camera and shot it on a J. Lane glass plate. Just guessed at exposure. . . one thousand one, one thousand two. . . . The maximum focussing distance with the lens is only about three feet. It has a focussing knob, but even with the bellows completely contracted, that's it. I'm still a moron about most of this. But even a blind pig finds a truffle once in awhile they say. Me. . . I got an image.

A fellow responded to the photo and message and said that the lens was probably an old projector lens.  The old Magic Lantern.  Cool.  But despite advice, I still haven't been able to get it to focus at distances over three feet.  I am a dunce, of course.  

I am slouching toward making a "real" picture rather than a test.  I am.  I really am.  But these are treacherous times, and I have no humans to shoot.  I guess I need to make some kids if I want a steady subject.  I could be like Sally Mann.  

There is danger in my experimenting, though.  Now I want a "real" antique brass lens made for cameras.  When my old pal Ed Ross died in 2016, I wanted to buy his lenses.  Isn't that awful?  But I did.  I didn't know who to contact, however.  Yesterday, thinking about lenses, I thought about Ross and did some Googling to remember what lenses he used.  Serendipity, I found a photographer who knew Ross who had gotten one of his lenses.  It was like a blow to the gut.  Again. . . awful, right?  The lens is a Dallmeyer 3B.  They are extremely difficult to come by.  I found one for sale online for $3,000.  

There is danger in desire.  And, of course, I haven't even made a memorable large format picture yet.  

Danger in desire.  Hmm.  Yes, indeed.  

I ran one of the black and white photos from the other day through the new Photoshop tool.  

It's funny that it turns my deck into a natural wood color.  My deck is painted green.  There is something spooky about this colorization tool, but just about everything digital is becoming so.  When I was a kid, I used to watch Walter Cronkite's "The 21st Century."  I loved the show, but old Walt never warned us about the dangers we would face.  He just promised me a flying car.


I want my flying car.  

Desire.  Can I tell you what I really want?

Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Wash, Rinse, Spin. . . .

 There is a new tool in Photoshop that colorizes black and white images.  Q posted the b&w version on his blog today (link).  I ran it through the new tool and came up with this.  It will be a new Instagram sensation.  


I got a message from my old boss at the factory last night.  She once had a student intern working in her office which was right next to mine.  The girl was sweet and fun and spent a lot of time hanging out with me.  Oh. . . those were the days.  But last night, the message said that the girl, now a woman, was living in Oregon and was a pretty competitive bicyclist.  She had been hit by a drunken driver.  The damage is terrible.  Nine broken ribs (I only had seven), three of which they plated (I only had two).  Broken right femur, left tibia, and left arm, all now with titanium implants.  Broken feet.  They had to fuse two of her spinal vertebrae.  She has feeling in her broken arm now but still has not been able to move it.  My old  boss thought I could relate.  A few emails have gone back and forth.  It is terrible what can happen.  

It took me back, first to the images of her as a young woman, then to my own accident.  

I took this picture while narcotized a few days after being hit.  I had my iPhone.  

Even on death's door, I could not quit making photographs.  This is my hospital room just days after I got crushed.  

Crazy.  

What possesses?  You have to ignore the tragedy, I guess, and focus on the future.  You make deals with yourself and say it will be O.K.  But further tragedies always loom.  It could have been better.  

She'll have a hard row to hoe.  

I was lazy yesterday.  When I got to my house, I felt overwhelmed.  My kitchen floor and countertops are full of photo chemicals, developing tanks, spools and reels and funnels and measuring cups.  I had too many plans.  I took a shower and decided to do just one thing.  That is all I had to do.  Just load some glass plates into the glass plate holders, then try to make a photograph with the 4x5 studio view camera that I have owned for more than a decade and never used.  It has an old brass lens I bought on eBay then that I wanted to use for making wet plate images.  I took it out of the closet where it has lain for all those years.  I must never have tried even to focus the camera after I mounted the lens.  I put the camera on a tripod and tried to focus on the back screen.  It wouldn't.  WTF?  After futzing with it for awhile, I realized that the lens would only focus about three feet away at the farthest.  On a bellows?  For the life of me, I can't figure this one out.  But at three feet, things are sharp.  So I loaded the glass plates.  I would take a chance.  I've never really had luck with these glass plates before.  They are super slow at a rating of iso 2.  I've tried, but never have gotten an adequate image.  I had little hope this time, but I would spend my afternoon trying.  The lens has no shutter, nor, of course, does the camera, so exposures are just a guess.  I had two plates.  I would count two seconds on one and three seconds on the other.  Just guesses.  I don't even know what the aperture of the lens is.  

I took the rig outside.  Yup.  Another photo of the milk can.  Still just testing.  Took one.  Took the other.  Got the developing tank and went to the garage and the dark tent to move them from the holders to the tank.  Came back and Googled developing times.  Mixed the right chemicals.  Etc.  I rotated the tank every minute without hoping.  

Later that day. . . WTF?  For the first time, it worked.  Both plates have images.  I will scan them today and see how they turned out.  

But I had to fly.  I had to get back in time to take my mother to therapy.  She is doing well, thank you.  

Then I cooked dinner.  We tried to watch the news, but there was none.  They are saying the same things they said six months ago.  We turned it off.  

A couple hours and a few episodes of "Blacklist" later, it was time for bed.  

I woke in the middle of the night.  I knew what would be coming, so I got up and took an Advil P.M.  I am gooey this morning.  But. . . it is time to do it all again.  

Wash, rinse, spin. . . . 


Tuesday, July 27, 2021

My Little Piece of Paris

This is a little experiment I did yesterday.  I just wanted to know if I still had skills.  It is a picture I took on old old Fuji instant film, then processed in my own special way.  I don't know.  I was very excited at first.  Now. . . maybe.  But I've already sent it out to friends, so I must stick by it.  The Tuileries table and chairs, the shaft of light.  It is Hemingway's Paris right in my own backyard.  But it is a stage, a fairly empty scene.  Perhaps you know what it needs.  

Disease is abroad in my own home state.  I may stop going to the gym again.  I don't know.  I woke up this morning feeling none to well--stuffy nose, a head full, drainage.  Covid isn't the only thing about.  There are apparently some pretty bad colds and flus here, too.  Since getting the vaccine, I've become pretty lax, but they say now that I can still get sick; I just probably won't die from it.  

I don't like getting sick.  

But I do like seeing people.  

I'm just not sure they are as happy about seeing me now.  

Selavy.  


Monday, July 26, 2021

Self-Love

Call it what you will.  This was test #2 with the Liberator.  It does a lovely job with making things out of focus, or rather, of limiting the plane of focus to something very narrow.  The thing to do is learn how to work with it.  I've had the camera for almost a decade and I haven't used it enough to learn much at all.  It is a more cumbersome camera than I had imagined it would be when I bought it.  It is not only the camera, however.  Everything is expensive--film, holders, hoods.  As you can see, there is a light leak on the right side of the image.  I don't know if it is the holder or the back of the camera.  If it is the holder, I don't know which one.  I have about fifteen, and they are all old.  Or it may be the way I place the holder in the back.  There is a lot to go wrong.  

I am looking at shooting 8x10 film.  I have shot it before, but again, I gave up.  I am sending off four sheets of color film to be processed.  I think it is color film.  I think it has been exposed.  It would be from years ago since I haven't used the 8x10 camera since I retired.  God knows.  But the film costs $10 per sheet and developing costs the same.  Each image, if it turns out, and if it does, bad or not, costs $20.  That is pretty ridiculous.  Why would I do it?  Even processing my own 4x5 film is costing about $6.50 per shot, again whether it is any good or not.  Not even instant film costs that much.  

As I've said before, I'm like a guy carving ducks and seagulls in his garage.  I'm like a stamp or coin collector.  There is no money in it other than on the outgoing tide.  You know.  The guy who has been building an airplane in his garage for the past decade.  The guy who has the old cars that he plans on restoring.  Always a guy.  Why is that?  Why is it always a guy?  

I worked on things photographic today.  I finished the book. . . sort of.  I've ordered a copy to see what it looks like.  I will be able to go through it better in print form, I think, and if it needs more editing, I will go back and make the changes.  If I can live with what I have, I will let you know, and if you think you want to pay the publishing cost of the book, you can get one.  Again, no money to me, the duck carver.  I just like you and am giving you something I've made for cost.  

"Look, honey!  He made a table out of a cypress stump.  He put a CLOCK in it!!!"

Yes, you can order the Cyprus Stump Clock Table if you hurry, and I'll throw in a Popeil Pocket Fisherman at no extra charge (link).  

I had an idea once for a project back when I had the studio.  I was going to call it Small Trades.  I wanted to photograph people in their work uniforms.  I shot two lifeguards and an equestrian.  That was as far as I got.  I think I should try to start it up once again.  

But now I need to go cook dinner for my mother.  Until tomorrow. . . . 

* * * 

Looking back at this makes me sad.  I want a studio.  I want to have the energy for these projects again.  Why didn't I do more on this?  Coulda/woulda/shoulda.  Gets me nowhere.  

I haven't done anything for two days.  I haven't taken a walk.  I haven't showered.  I haven't even washed my face.  The thought of getting back into the gym, of being active, is burdensome.  Showering, too.  I think there is something wrong with me.  I am succumbing to "it all."  I have become a simple, stinky automaton.  I came back to my mother's and made dinner, poured a drink, watched television, took a pill and went to bed.  I somehow feel that it would be wrong to enjoy life more than my mother.  Yes, that is it.  It is true.  And having said that, perhaps that is the thing wrong in many people's lives.  Of course it is.  Guilt.  People should be as miserable as the one's they love.  

Oy!

Self-love, I'm told.  One needs to practice it.  I have never been good at that.  Self-indulgence, yes, but not so much love.  I always figured we were here to take a beating.  But maybe today I could try.  What would I do today for someone I loved?  

That is a dilemma many must suffer.  The love practice is harder than it seems.  

O.K.  I need to fix my mother some breakfast.  It is easier just to take the beating.  

Sunday, July 25, 2021

The Verge

I feared having another sleepless night.  I could feel it in me, though, the sleeplessness.  It is a nervousness and an anxiety.  At evening's end, I took an Advil PM.  I sat around for awhile, and it didn't feel as if it was working, so I took another.  Two is always a mistake in the morning.  I don't know what is in those pills, but it should be illegal.  Rather, they keep things that are less harmful like opium from us.  Nobody ever lost a kidney from opium smoking, but plenty have from Advil.  What sense does that make? 

I would have been better off with a nerve pill, I think, but they are difficult for me to procure.  I am trying to save what I have.  And so. . . .

The milk can picture is another test shot.  That is all I have at present.  Making real pictures would take a commitment I can't make at the moment.  My mother is getting much better, though.  I don't have to do everything for her.  She is able to use her broken shoulder side a bit more every day.  Of course.  It pleases her, but the better she gets, the closer I get to moving home, and therein lies a dilemma.  For her, I mean.  There will come the painful day of "extraction" when I ask, "Do you think you can manage on your own now?"  And, of course, she will guilt me badly.  "But mom. . . ?"  

An old man living with his mother.  

I need to begin to get out more, get on the highway for the day, take some cameras and see if I can find some worthy subjects.  But there is only one subject that is worthy, the subject I dare not whisper.  

"The Verge."  

Only the mysteries endure.  I want to photograph what is taboo.  I want to photograph the quick mysteries that dissipate so quickly yet perpetually endure.  

I can't write anything better than that today.  I will leave it there.  

Saturday, July 24, 2021

Goin' to a Go-Go

Oh, man. . . that was TOO bleak.  Let's try something more fun.  A Go-Go.

I am trying to convince my buddies to get their wives and girlfriends to put on some go-go boots and give it a whirl.  They all have iPhones.  They can do video.  I would be thrilled.  Can't think of anything better these days than that.  

And yesterday wasn't all a bust.  It was Sushi Friday.  O.K.  I ate it at my mother's kitchen table with the overhead light shining, but you can't have everything.  

That's what they say, at least. 


Misery, Fear, and Despair

 I am miserable this morning.  I slept one hour at a time last night.  In between wakings, I had violently horrible nightmares.  Old age, disease, death. . . .  My right hip hurt me badly.  I have great fear that I will need to either use a walker or have it replaced.  All night long, I realized one thing, but I won't confess it here. I shouldn't even tell you that I had a bad night, really, for you know the old saying about telling people your woes--eighty percent of people don't care.  The other twenty are glad.  After a big life, I am sure many resent me.  I had too much for too long.  Everything but money and children.  I've already had some tell me with undisguised glee, "You'll die lonely and alone."  To which I would reply, "Who doesn't?"  I mean, sure, I'd like us all to go together.  That would make the most sense.  I think we should all be the same age.  Well. . . there might be an obvious flaw in that statement if you look at my life.  But you get my drift.  

Yes, we should all cease to exist at the same time.  Any other way is cruelty.  

But last night, trying to sleep under the Full Buck Moon was a terrible thing.  My astrologer told me it was a good moon for me, an Aquarian moon or something, but the astrologers have not been my friends for some time.  I am star-crossed, I guess.  Like Romeo and Juliet (link).  

Yesterday made one month exactly of living with my mother.  Yesterday was a busy one.  I drove my mother to two pharmacies and two grocery stores.  Later, I took her to therapy.  In between, I went to my house to check on things.  The cat has not eaten her food for two days.  Hasn't shown up when I'm there.  She thinks I've abandoned her, I'm sure.  

I had a couple hours, so I decided to develop a roll of color film and four sheets of 4x5 black and white.  Back to the dark tent.  Unloading, loading. . . then to the sink, heating chemicals, twirling tanks. . . why?  You can just pay someone to do all this.  It isn't even a someone.  They have calibrated machines to do the work.  In the end, the four sheets of 4x5 were blank.  What happened?  Why?  I can't figure it out.  The roll of film is hanging, but I won't know what is on it until I scan it.  It will take me a lot of work.  They have machines to do that, too.  What was I thinking, anyway?  It's only money.  

O.K.  I can't think.  My mother is blasting the local news on commercial t.v.  My nerves are shot.  I am living her life now.  

Friday, July 23, 2021

Mixed Results

I'll bet you've never seen this one before.  Well. . . I mean in color.  AND in 4x5 format, or at least 3.5x4.  But this, for me, is a great success.  It is the first color film I have ever developed.  And by gosh. . . I don't mind it at all.  

Still, it was a harrowing day with mixed results.  There was the mother/son morning, of course, and then the gym.  I didn't get to my house until noon. I was sweaty and sticky after taking a two mile walk following my workout, but I wanted to get started with mixing chemicals before I showered. I had to think through everything I needed to do.  The past year and a half has wilted my brain.  I no longer think through complex problems.  I daydream mostly, if even that.  Maybe I'm down to just identifying.  

"Carpet.  Table.  Chair.  Tree.  Sky."

I found thinking through the entirety of the day's processes irritating.  Early onset dementia, probably. I would need to make several trips to the garage and back.  First, I needed to load the film onto the developing reels in the dark tent.  I hate loading film onto reels in the dark tent.  My arms go in up to the elbows while my eyes are in the light.  There is a disconnect between what you see and what you do.  It makes me very irritable.  I usually have trouble getting the film started onto the reel, and if that happens, I have to unspool it and start over.  

"Don't forget the scissors and church key, idiot"

Of course, I didn't have a church key.  I couldn't find it last time I developed film and buying a new one slipped my mind.  I would have to improvise.

Three rolls of film, one 35mm and two 120mm.  And by gosh, everything went pretty smoothly.  

Back to the kitchen to develop.  Oh, shit. . . I forgot the developer.  Back to the garage.  I was using a very dilute Rodinal mix and a stand development technique that takes an hour.  Once the chemicals go in, you just let it stand.  So while the Rodinal was doing its job, I mixed up the color chemicals.  They had to be mixed in water precisely 102 degrees.  I was nervous.  This is the sort of thing I am bad at.  I am not a precise person.  In zoology labs, my fetal pig dissections looked like they'd been done by a pack of starving rodents.  I'm good at painting the middle of the wall.  Trim work. . . not so much.  

First the developer, then the two part bleach and fix.  As I was mixing them, an Amazon truck pulled up.  My sous vide cooker had arrived.  I needed it to maintain the water temperature when I developed the film.  

Back to the garage and the dark tent to unload the 4x5 film and get it into the developing tank.  Four sheets.  I'm getting good at it.  No problem.  

Back to the house.  I unpacked the sous vide.  The black and white film had been standing for half an hour.  I gave it a couple inversions.  Another half hour.  I had time to go to the bank and deposit a check.  When I got home, there were only a few minutes of development left.  Then the stop bath, fix, wash.  But the wash water kept running red.  WTF?  Uh-oh. 

When I pulled the film out, it was blank.  I'd fucked up.  The container I thought was holding Rodinal wasn't.  I had poured something else in mistakenly.  Shit piss fuck goddamn.  I was crestfallen.  

I carefully labelled the chemicals I had just mixed.  Now it was time to try my first attempt at color.  I had little confidence that I had mixed the chemicals carefully enough.  Even if I had, I was pretty sure the colors would be muted and off.  I filled a pan of water and put the sous vide in, set the temperature, poured the chemicals and put them inside.  I waited for the temperature to come up.  I poured.  I agitated.  First the color developer, then the blix.  Three and a half minutes.  Eight minutes.  Rinse.  

Expecting nothing.  

The first one came out of the tank. 

Mom.  I had taken the photo in the morning.  Wtf?  I had just loaded the film the day before.  How?

O.K.  I guess the film had already been exposed.  I must have put it in the box to send off for developing and then forgotten about it.  Many people liked the double exposure of the milk can.  Nobody will like this one, especially me.  

Four sheets of film.  Two double exposures.  But oo-la-la.  Two turned out!

I left them to dry while I greased myself in coconut oil, hair and body.  Just part of my beauty process.  Twenty minutes later, I was in the shower.  Hair washed and conditioned, body degreased, I dried and dressed and began cleaning up the mess in the kitchen.  I looked at the clock.  I would barely have time to scan the negatives before heading back to cook dinner for my mother.  

So, what you see is the result of half a day's work.  Two medium format color pictures reduced to the resolution of an iPhone.  If you take into account all the chemical mixing I did yesterday, it is more like a full day's work.  Was it worth it?  Well. . . it makes me kind of happy.  The colors pop, the images are clear, and there is that medium format look to them, sort of, maybe, I think.  

I will do more this weekend.  Now that I know the process works, I need to make something of consequence.  No more "test shots."  

And when I don't make anything of consequence, I will follow Q into the world of iPhone photography.  

Thursday, July 22, 2021

Making Memories

Make memories in the booth.  Of course.  Memories made here.  

But what good are they without the photographic evidence?  

With all the iPhone selfies, it is a wonder that photo booths are still in existence.  But there is nothing like having a print in the hand (except maybe two in the bush).  

The worst crime is not being young.  The second worst is not being pretty.  Or so it seems.  

Boomer. 

Tomorrow makes four weeks of living at my mother's house.  A month.  My life is dribbling away.  Every day is the same.  Don't try to imagine.  It is impossible unless you have done it.  My brain has shut down.  I have nothing left to say.  I've become a mime with a very limited vocabulary.  That's a good line if you get it.  

Long ago and far away. . . . 

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

My Own Color

This is the sort of brilliant photography I have been capable of recently.  "How does he do it?" you might ask!  All you need to do is practice.  You do best what you do most.  

I got this back from the photo lab yesterday along with eleven other brilliant images.  BUT--I bought chemicals to develop my own color film.  That's right.  Rather than spending a few bucks to get my film processed and scanned, I'll do it myself.  It will be hours and hours of fun.  There will be no end to the bad pictures I can afford to take.  

That is how it seems to me, anyway.  But I am kind of excited to try developing my own large format color negatives.  And I will be until I do it.  Sooner or later, I will be sickened by the whole thing and just spend the money and buy the Hasselblad digital camera that I lust for.  That would probably make me happy for a day or two.  

I DO have some experiments that I want to try, though.  You know what a mad scientist I am.  Nothing makes me happier than sitting with a bunch of test tubes in the old photo laboratory.  

Q sent me a link to the iPhone he is going to buy.  It is really expensive, but not as expensive as everything else.  He'll be a famous photographer before I can develop a roll of color film.  

Selavy.  


Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Whatever

 Well. . . here is the first mistake, an unintended double exposure using 4x5 film.  I think either photo might have been nice.  Despite the mistake, I almost like it.  The big surprise to me was that the modified camera does not make a 4x5 negative as advertised, but a 3.5x4 inch one instead.  About that, I'm a bit disappointed.  I was hoping for the whole shebang.

I loaded up more film yesterday and set out to make some photos.  It was bright and sunny. . . until I got to my destination.  Then the skies clouded over heavily and storm clouds circled.  Since I was only running a test to see if I could make everything work, I just shot a couple pics around my yard.  Then mixed chemicals.  Then loaded them into the developing tank.  Then I souped them for the appropriate time.  And then. . . voila!

I got an actual image!  3.5x4 inch perfection.  The camera works.  The converted back works.  The chemicals were right.  There were no light leaks.  The viewfinder is almost accurate in framing and focusing.  "Almost."  And so, after hours and days, I produced a less than mediocre picture.  I couldn't have been more pleased.  

Then, after scanning it and tweaking it in Lightroom, I looked at it for awhile and decided I could probably have done this with an iPhone.  

I sent Q a link to an article about a Magnum photographer who now works solely with one (link).  Q wrote this morning that the article has convinced him to get the newest model.  I guess my images weren't enough to convince him to work with the 4x5.  

Still, I think the photo has "a quality."  Just stick one of Sally Mann's daughters in there and you'd have something.  

I'll try making some portraits and see if the whole thing is going to work out.  Meanwhile, I have a bunch of medium format film to develop tomorrow.  We'll see if they turn out as well as an iPhone photo.  

Sometimes you just have to do the wrong thing.  

WE NOW INTERRUPT THIS BLOG FOR BREAKING NEWS!

I think I have finished putting together the book "Lonesomeville."  I say "finished" because I can't really see it any more.  It has taken a long time and I am becoming blind to it.  I can no longer understand my original intention in ordering the photographs and I am tired of trying to come up with something new.  I have put it together digitally on a bookmakers website.  I need to write an introduction to it, then I am going to order a copy.  I am using the best paper and book cover and bindings they offer.  There are almost  200 photos.  That may be too many.  Because of the cost, I have placed them on facing pages.  Perhaps I should cut the number in half and use only the right hand page, but I think I will leave it as is until I have a hard copy in my hand and then decide.  I have left out the more explicit photos much to the dismay of some who have proofed it, but I am a bit shy about that.  I have enough images for a Vol. II if I decide to include them later.  Those are simply the Polaroids, of course.  I can make Volumes III-X with the digital images.  I was a maniac for a few years, but you know what they say--you do best what you do most.  

But "Lonesomeville," the book, will be available in the coming months.  And for anyone who comes to the blog who is interested, I will make copies available to you at no cost.  Wait--that's not right!  I will make them available at the publisher's price without a mark up. . . meaning without any money going to the photographer.  I don't expect many requests, so it is not really a big deal.  I will buy a few copies of my own to send around to galleries and publishers just to see what happens.  I am prepared for disappointment.  That is what I tell myself, anyway; still, you know how that goes.  You can never completely inure yourself to disappointment.  But, as the kids used to say in the bad old days, "Whatever."

I like that as a title.  I will try to develop a project around the concept.  Right?  It is reductio ad absurdum, I think.  It applies to the ideological state of the world today.  It might have wings.  

Whatever.  

Monday, July 19, 2021

Almost Excited

Frank Horvat

I got a late start yesterday as I do most days now.  By the time I had done my family duties and headed out the door for my house, it was nearly noon.  O.K.  I was ready to take the big camera out for a spin.  I grabbed some film holders that I hoped were loaded with Tri-X film.  They might be.  They might be loaded and already exposed.  They might be loaded with color film.  They might not be loaded at all.  I have tried working with the Liberator so many times and have failed and gotten frustrated so many times that whatever is or is not in the holders is always a mystery to me.  I do not have a good system.  So, I said, I will just shoot whatever is or is not in here today, develop whatever there might be, and then start again.  With a system.  Things will be marked and cared for.  If there was nothing at the end of the day, I said, it would have been a good training session.  I made some adjustments to the cheap, 3D printed 4x5 back on the camera, put a thick carrying strap on the camera (after searching long for the proper attachments), and hopped in the car for my distant destination.  

Oh, boy. . . the day was hot and humid.  I was still feeling the effects of the sleep aids from the night before.  Sweat popped out on my forehead.  I set out.  

Using the camera was easy.  It's a beauty.  I used an app on my phone to meter my shots, set my aperture and shutter speed, cocked the shutter, removed the dark slide, framed the shot, and. . . click.  I put the dark slide back, took the film holder out of the cheap plastic back (which I expect to break), turned it around to the second side, locked it in, and headed to the next place.  It is the sort of thing that will make you appreciate a digital camera, but there is a beauty in all of it, too.  

But, wow, the sun was beating me down.  I felt like puking.  One o'clock in the afternoon is not the outdoor photography time here and now.  It is nap time.  It is mimosa time.  It is anything time but lugging around a bunch of photo equipment in the sun.  I know there is a saying about that, but I can't bring it to mind just now.  

I had been walking on deserted streets for the most part, but the way back to the car was on a busier road.  As I walked by a union hall, I decided to take a photo.  As I got ready, two fellows walked by.  

"Wow!  Nice camera.  Is that a Polaroid?"

I explained to him that it was. . . once.  He was very interested.  Another fellow coming from the other direction stopped.  He was interested, too.  I could see that this was going to be a camera that would inspire curiosity.  People would want their picture taken with it.  As I explained the camera to the last fellow there, I said, "Here, let me take your photo.  I'll send you a copy." 

He was pleased.  

That was the last photo of the day.  I fell into the car and headed home.  

Where exhausted, I dropped into a coma.  I didn't wake up until very late in the day.  I needed to make dinner for my mother, but I wanted to develop the film.  I called her to tell her I'd be a bit late.  I opened a beer hoping it would give me strength.  I headed to the garage to load the film into the developing tank and get the chemicals. The first holder I opened had film.  The second did not.  I was two for four.  I opened another film holder.  There was film.  Four for six.  The tank only holds four sheets of film.  I trucked everything back to the house and began the souping process.  

I expected nothing.  That is what I had gotten so many times before.  But what I hoped for was something brilliant.  

Tic tok, tic tok.  

After developing, rinsing, fixing, rinsing, with mixed emotions, I opened the tank.  Two of the film sheets were opaque.  Just black.  The second two. . . holy shit!  Images.  I pulled them out and looked closely.  Well, there were two images on each.  I had already shot them.  They were double exposed.  O for six.  

But hey--I knew the camera worked.  I mean, one of the images was one I had taken that day.  Why were the other two black?  Beats me.  But. . . I was almost excited.  There was still hope.  

I went back to the garage and loaded the emptied film holders.  They have fresh film.  I know what is in them.  Today, once more, I will give it a go.  

My god, what a lot of work.  

The photo at the top is one Frank Horvat took of his daughter.  It is beautiful, I think, and I wonder if it is erotic.  It is certainly curious.  There are no nudes in Horvat's career until the last few years, and many of those are of his family.  There are some very sculptural ones of genitals, male and female.  It makes me wonder much.  Perhaps the passing of his wife?  Or are there other earlier ones.  

Well. . . I was wrong.  I just Googled "Frank Horvat Nudes."  There are many.  Maybe I knew and had simply forgotten.  You can buy this one for $7,300.00. 

There are more explicit ones, but I rather like this.  


Sunday, July 18, 2021

Repurposed

That's right. . . I'm down to photos like this.  WTF has happened?  What has become of me?  I've loaded up a bunch of 4x5 film holders.  I'm going out to shoot them today.  I swear I will.  And develop them as well.  But of what shall they be?  Twisted metal?  Highway overpasses?  Miscellaneous garbage?  

I'm kerflumpt.  

Apparently that is not a word.  

I promise myself that today is an experiment, and if it works, I'll begin taking portraits.  People pictures, I mean.  

Here's the camera.  It is the one I used for all the Pola Lonesomeville pictures.  It has been useless for years, however, since they no longer make the old peel apart instant films.  

Recently, though, I found a fellow who makes a back that allows this camera to shoot 4x5 film.  With Covid and all, I haven't tried it yet.  Today will be the test.  I took this with me to the photo store yesterday, and the kids went wild.  I hope it works out.  If so, it will be "da bomb."  At least that is the dream.  But as I've confessed, I've lost my nerve.  I went out with two Rollieflex medium format cameras yesterday to finish off the rolls of film that have been sitting in them for god knows how long.  The end of my walk was through the local farmer's market.  Just carrying a camera made me a villain, it seemed.  I would smile at people as they passed, and they would look back at me like I had just raped their child.  I have been cursed with the Mark of Cain, it seems.  

To wit: I know I should start working in drag.  It would make the world of difference.  It is just doing it the first time that is the hurdle.  First I have to go shopping.  I'm thinking one of those hideous print sack dresses that all the women my mother's age seem to wear, floral or just faux-Jackson Pollock print.  Some sneakers.  A baseball hat and a Covid mask.  I don't know.  Maybe it would work.  

But first, a trial by fire.  I'll take the big fucker out today and shoot through about a dozen sheets of film, then take them back to the house to develop.  I have no faith, though.  Every 4x5 I've taken has had something wrong with it.  Usually it is my fault, but not always.  We shall see.  

I've made a luncheon date with c.c. for the coming week.  I realized I haven't seen him since the whole Covid thing began.  Hayzoos Marimba, that's a long, long time.  We will eat on the banks of a large lake and have Goldfish sandwiches and watery drinks.  That, at least, is what he has promised.  But that is what hillbillies do.  He is going to harangue me about Twinsville.  I have not secured credentials, and now I'm not sure at all if I will go.  It may be a little soon to leave my mother alone anyway.  I always knew that, but I was preparing just in case.  If this 4x5 shit works out today, though, I may be hot as a rooster in the henhouse to go.  

But if I were a betting man. . . . 


Saturday, July 17, 2021

Friday Night

I wasn't looking for it.  I was trying to find something to watch with my mother other than the Medicare Channel, and tried putting on another episode of "Frazier" on the Peacock Channel which I had downloaded on my Amazon Prime account a few days earlier.  I was showing my mother that she could watch all the shows she liked without or with minimal commercial interruption.  We were on Season One, Episode Five, I believe, of "Frazier."  But when I pulled up the Peacock Channel, I was faced with the decision to pay for a monthly subscription or watch something else.  This was not the deal when I signed up, though I had suspected it would happen.  Cutting cable, kids, is going to become just as expensive as it used to be to have cable.  All the shows are being divided up between competing media entities.  Don't count on your government representatives to help you with this.  They are capitalists one and all.  All you can do is become a pirate, get in touch with someone who can jailbreak the shows, and live with the criminals.  

Or you can just quit watching television and read.  

Anyway. . . I tried to find something on Amazon that we might watch together.  It was Friday, and I felt a bit out of sorts.  My day had been broken up into weird sections as I had to take my mother to her therapy session at 4:30.  There went happy hour.  I had already driven to my house to check on the mail, pick up a package that had been delivered, run the printer, feed the cat, etc.  I had even thought I might take some film cameras out just to finish off the extant rolls so that I could try to process them in a new (to me) chemical soup.  Of course, the day and the light were brilliant until I picked up my cameras.  Just then, as can happen in my own home state, it began to rain.  My plans were fairly dashed.  

I spent a few minutes mucking about the house before it was time to drive back to my mother's, drive her to therapy, sit for the hour, then bring her home.  

I was hungry.  My mother wasn't.  "Get whatever you want," she said.  I sat down with a drink and a little cheroot to try to take the edge off my day.  I decided to call my favorite Italian restaurant for takeout.  Oh. . . it was Sushi Friday, but I wanted big calories, a carbonara full of terrible things.  I knew the restaurant and bar would be packed on a Friday at the workweek's end, and I knew traffic would be bad.  I put out my cheroot, downed my drink, and headed to town.  

And back. 

Where I sat in the garage with ma and ate with my plastic plates balancing on my lap and the evening's humidity caressing my skin.  The arugula salad was good, but the carbonara was thick and heavy.  I could feel my waistline expanding with each bite.  I wasn't having fun.  Even the scotch was unsatisfying.  I wanted something fun, a good craft cocktail.  When I had picked up my food, even wearing my homeboy clothes, the two bartenders gave me knowing greetings and fist bumps.  A woman at the bar said hello.  I asked her how she was doing, and she pointed at her fancy drink.  All about, young vamps were showing off new cleavage and fancy dresses.  In the corner, a man with mostly greying hair was talking to a startling young woman with incredible shoulders and a Louise Brooks haircut.  He was making the classic mistake of facing her square up, staring to show she had his undivided attention.  She looked like a working woman trapped.  She, of course, would have preferred him to be more demure, but he was a fool fishing with the only bait he had.  I wanted to rescue her, but she knew why she was there.  Everywhere I looked, I saw a story.  My blood quickened, but of course, I was only there for pickup.  In mere moments, I was gone.  

My mother was not in a good mood.  Her shoulder was paining her after her therapy session.  There was nothing good about this Friday night.  

Ditching the Peacock Channel, I was browsing movies that Amazon suggested for me.  "We'll Take Manhattan" looked intriguing.  I watched the trailer.  Holy smokes!  It was a movie about David Bailey and his girlfriend, the model Jean Shrimpton.  

"You want to try this?" I asked my mom with hope.  

"Sure," she said.  "Whatever you want to watch."  

"We'll just watch it for a bit and see if you are interested."

After fifteen minutes or so, I saw her eyes closing.  

"How do you like it?"

"It's not something that really interests me."

"Well. . . O.K.  I can watch it later."  But I was miffed.  I arranged the controller so that it was on commercial television so mother could watch the advertisements on the Medicare Channel.  I have come to realize that she likes them.  It is the same commercials over and over and over and over, but it must give her comfort.  She can watch five minutes of "Gunsmoke" and then five minutes of commercials.  Nothing new.  No challenges.  She can experience the same thing she experienced the day before and the day before that.  Continuity and consistency.  

But I, first slowly, then more quickly, am losing myself in this routine.  

"What do you want to watch?" she asked me.  

"Watch your shows," I said.  Then something snarky snuck out.  "The ones you've seen before."  

I left the room to breathe.  Outside, the world was kinetic, moving once again.  Inside, time stood still and turned stale.  My legs bobbed, my jaws clenched.  I sat down with my computer and pulled up the movie.  I decided I would watch it.  

Funny, I thought, that I had never heard of it before.  It wasn't good, but it wasn't bad if you were interested in the period, in the event.  I poured a big scotch to see me through.  

When it was over, I went back to the t.v. room.  My mother leaned back on some pillows, her eyes closed. 

I took a nerve pill and said goodnight.  I turned the ceiling fan on high and lay down.  I tried to think of making pictures.  The Louise Brooks girl with the serious face.  

(link)

Friday, July 16, 2021

Freakish Heartland Sideshow

What are these for?

Things went well for awhile with the Twinsville Twins Days staff.  They were quick with their responses.  I wrote them a vision statement, of sorts, in which I explained I was on my quest for Americana, that Twins Days was part of a larger personal project, that the festival represented a celebration of diversity set in the great American heartland.  

If I was not on assignment from a news outlet, they wanted $1,200.00.  They were quick with that response.  And clear.  

Do you think I can find a reputable news outlet that would like to give me the assignment?  They need to be willing to explain how they are going to use the images.  

I want to write back, on letterhead, that I would be there to document the sort of freakish sideshow that is the American Heartland.  But I won't.  Rather, I'd like to request a look at their books to find out where the money they raise really goes.  I've decided it is just a funnel for illegal funds that line someone's private coffers.  

Oh, I am a bitter, bitter man.  I had visions of becoming the next Diane Arbus or Garry Winogrand.  Such tasks are more difficult than they used to be.  

Suddenly my vision is cloudy, my limbs heavy, my mind mundane.  I don't want to walk the neighborhood making photos of mailboxes any more.  Why do we even have mailboxes now?  They are simply a corporate tool for passing advertisements and bills.  That is all I get, anyway.  Perhaps your mailbox is full of personal letters.  I don't even get birthday cards any more.  

That is not entirely true.  I got two, one from a car dealership and the other from a bar in Palm Beach offering me a free drink.  

I'm tired of photographing houses and cars and driveways, but I have lost my chutzpah.  It is not my fault. People have gotten so very paranoid and mean.  I don't want to deal with their anger any more.  

I know what I would like to photograph, but to even whisper it would set off alarms.  If only I were younger.  

Have you heard?  Covid's back.  Affluent America can't convince its conservative base to take a free vaccine that less affluent countries can't even get.  I've decided it's o.k.  I think I liked lockdown and separation after all.  Somehow, it makes everyone equal.  You either follow protocol or something bad will happen.  The new variants are even more democratic.  They are attacking younger people, and those it doesn't kill suffer from long term effects.  My impulse is evil, of course.  I want everyone to be as miserable as I am.  If I'm not happy, no one gets to be.  I learned that from Crabby Appleton.  

Maybe I should move to Hong Kong.  

I may make one desperate try to get credentials for the Twins Days committee.  I have to decide today.  Asking for them, though, makes me feel a little sad and creepy like the coach of the female gymnastic team asking to put "security" cameras in the girl's locker room.  For "protection."  

I've been living at my mother's house for three weeks now.  I am a settled itinerant.  I'm living out of a cardboard box.  Nothing is my own.  But I have become a neighborhood favorite.  I am storyteller of endless tales.  People think I'm funny.  

I've found my audience.  

Thursday, July 15, 2021

Rat Zapper!!!

The green light on top of the black plastic rat zapper had been flashing for a couple of days.  One of my mother's neighbors had brought it over when she learned about "the rat."  She showed me how it worked.  She put in the four double D batteries and turned it on.  The green light flashed for a moment to let you know it was working, and then it went off.  Then she turned it off.  After she left, I put some peanut butter on a piece of cardboard and stuck it in the back of the long, black tunnel.  I was a little worried.  What would happen if I stuck my hand in it when it was turned on?

Still, I had no confidence in the thing.  I just couldn't believe those batteries were powerful enough to zap a rat.  Maybe give it a jolt, sure, but kills it?  Nope.  I just didn't believe it. 

Still, I put it beside the refrigerator.  And then I set some other, more conventional rat traps, too.  

Days went by.  I checked the traps.  Nothing.  Where had that little fucker gone?  Perhaps he would be gnawing on my toes one night while I slept.  

Meanwhile, the little green light on top of the rat zapper was flashing.  

"What does that mean?" my mother asked.  

"I don't know."

"It must flash green until you catch a rat.  Then it probably turns red."

That made sense to me.  

Then yesterday, my mother said, "I smell something over by the refrigerator.  Do you think he might have died somewhere behind it?"  I didn't pay much attention to her until later when I went to the refrigerator.  I smelled it to.  That is when I decided to look in the rat zapper for the first time.  I picked it up and stared into the tunnel.  HOLY SHIT!  I just about jumped.  There it was.  The little fucker had been fried!

"Mom! Mom!"

I couldn't get over it.  For the entire day, every time I thought about it, I chuckled and smiled.  

"Can you believe that worked?  I can't believe that worked.  How can those little batteries supply enough power to kill a rat?  D'you wanna try and stick your hand in there?"

Ho-ho.  We were happy, my mom and me.  I felt like dancing a jig.

That was late in the morning.  I hadn't slept well at all the night before and my day was running late.  It wasn't until noon that I was ready for a trip to the gym.  

"Mom, I'm going to go to my house after the gym.  I'm going to grease up with coconut oil for about twenty minutes, then take a shower, wash my hair.  After that I have some things to do.  I'll go to the grocery store.  I won't be back until suppertime.  Will you be alright?"

"Sure."  

That's right.  I greased up with coconut oil.  I'm supposed to do that with my hair, so I just go whole hog.  That's one of the beauty secrets that makes me so damn attractive.  Ho!  

I have to admit, I never understood the difficulty bleached blondes have with washing their hair before.  Ili used to tell me I didn't understand how long it took to wash her hair.  '

Oops!  I guess I'm not telling tales out of school.  

But now I understand.  Shampoo and bleached hair just collide in a tangled mess.  I get it now, and I understand why some women go to the salon to have their hair washed.  Let somebody else do it.  I would apologize to Ili now, but of course. . . . 

I had thought to take the cameras out for a bit in the afternoon, but as soon as I oiled up, it began to rain.  And it rained.  For the rest of the afternoon.  

So, having oiled and bathed and dealt with my very blond hair, having dressed, without hope of making photos, AND. . . trying to avoid afternoon drinking. . . I did what all kids do on a rainy afternoon.  I turned to the computer.  

Out of curiosity, I Googled "Twinsville Festival" to see if the Twins Festival is happening this year.  And indeed, it is!  I perused the website wondering if my mother would be well enough for me to go in mid-August.  Maybe.  What the hell.  I decided to submit a form to get a press pass.  

Drats!  I had missed the deadline for submission by two days.  How?  Am I cursed?  Am I never to be allowed to take photographs again?  What the hell, I thought.  I'll apply anyway.  I filled out the form, told them why I would be coming.  Then. . . I changed the date that automatically appeared at the top of the form.  I didn't think I could, but I did.  

SUBMIT.

Now I wait to see if they send me an email telling me that they don't want cheating liars coming to their honest American festival.  On the off chance, however, that I might get the press pass, I need to prepare.  Twins, for God's sake.  A whole field full of them.  I'll need to think this over and decide what it means metaphorically, symbolically.  A little research will be required.  

I wonder what other sorts of cool festivals there might be this summer? 

I'm still high from the rat zapper.  I can't believe it worked.  Poor little rat.  I hope it went quickly.  

I am still curious about what would happen, however, if I stuck my hand in there.  I'm not curious enough to try it, though.  It might make a good party trick.  

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

It Seems Unfair

The day is off to a poor start.  I woke last night at 2:30.  You know how that goes.  I didn't get much sleep. I lay and thought of many things in my life from the way back, those mid-years when I thought I was really something.  There, however, in the infernal and sleepless darkness, weird truths emerged.  I would doze a bit, toss and turn, think some more, dream-like things, check the clock, etc.  This went on interminably, it seems, but of course, exhausted, much too late, I had to force myself out of bed.  It was long after eight.  

My mother came in from talking to the neighbor whose daughter had made her some preserves.  She asked me how I was doing.  

"In terms of what?" I asked.  I could have simply said "fine," of course.  My voice was raspy and my head sounded more solid than it should have like an old dog barking.  

"You slept so late," she said.  

Yesterday should have been different.  I went to the gym early hoping to get in a walk after my workout, but the skies opened and the rains came.  Unpredicted.  When I left the gym, the a.m. rains had done what they do here, made the air a sauna.  A.M. rain here can be a killer, p.m. rains a lifesaver. 

Back from the gym, I needed to rush in order to eat and get showered.  I had to take my mother for her therapy appointment.  She likes her therapist, and so do I.  He is nice and he is gentle and he seems surprised at how strong and flexible my mother is at her age.  That makes a big difference to her, I know.  But I sit with my mother for the hour while "vintage" or "classic" rock plays too loud in the background.  A man my own age who was rehabbing a broken wrist looked at me and smiled.  

"They've been playing Led Zeppelin the whole time I've been here.  I'm not complaining."

He thought we were in league, I guess, thought we both enjoyed such music.

"Must be a lot of old people here," I said.  That could be the only explanation.  None of the therapist looked over thirty.  A Jimmy Hendrix song came on.  I looked around.  Sure.  They must be playing this for the clientele.  Hendrix was preferable to Led Zeppelin, but I didn't say anything to the fellow about it.  I didn't tell him I'd much prefer "Something Blue."  I just grinned and nodded.  

By the time I got my mother home, it was mid-afternoon.  I sat on the sofa in front of the t.v.  My mother sat in her recliner.  I turned the t.v. on.  YouTube.  It recommended a bunch of Greyhound Bus documentaries for me to view.  I picked a brief one from the nineteen forties.  I was trying to interest my mother.  She left the room, so I put on some camera porn.  I was bored.  I turned off the television and took a nap.  What else was there to do? 

As so often happens, when I woke from the nap on the couch, I felt lethargic.  My body was heavy and my thoughts were slow and muddled.  I needed to get to my house and look after the cat.  I needed to do some shopping for dinner.  I needed to run the printer.  I walked out to the garage where my mother sat in her swivel rocker looking out at the street.  Somehow, miraculously, the air had cleared and cooled.  The light was a perfect Hopper, sharp and bright, the shadows clear and deep.  I should be out making pictures, I thought, but the time was late and I had chores and duties.  As I drove away, I couldn't shake the sleep away.  It was as if something had invaded me.  

The cat was on the deck when I got home.  I tried to talk to her, but she is pissed at me.  I could see that the neighbor had fed her in the morning.  She gets food but no attention.  Even though she pretends to disdain it, she, like all things, requires it.  The angle of her eyes reveals her displeasure.  

I have not been printing images for a long, long time.  The black channel of the print head is about 30% clogged and I either need to make the $1,500 repair or buy a new printer.  I wanted to make some prints, though.  I tried, but truly, I have lost my skill.  Updates in software, changes in protocols. . . I don't know? But I kept making mistakes.  Big mistakes.  30x20 inch mistakes.  I just couldn't get the settings right, it seemed.  If you don't print, it is difficult to explain, but getting the colors of the print to match the colors on the computer monitor is difficult.  If the color cast is wrong, the print is worthless. Matching profiles to paper, deciding what algorithm will drive the color processor. . . yada, yada, yada.  And it takes a long time for the printer to make a 30x20 inch print. When I had the studio, I could do other things, but sitting in my garage listening to the printer's drone. . . . 

Making a print that large on good matte paper uses a lot of ink.  I mean. . . cha-thing!  You can suck up forty or fifty dollars worth in a couple mistakes.  It can be maddening.  

When I finally emerged from the garage, I had a reasonably satisfying print.  The sun was bright, the air cooler, the light wonderful.  The cat was still pouting.  

I went inside and picked up one of my photo books and brought it out to the deck.  It was a book of Frank Horvat's photography.  I much admired his fashion photography from the '50s and 60s.  He was a pioneer in the manner of photographer William Klein.  Klein became more famous, but much of Horvat's work I find better.  Back when I was cranking out my own work, I used to write to photographers whose work I admired.  I wrote to Horvat, and for a brief while, we corresponded.  He was a very nice man in letters.  

I thumbed through the pages looking at the color photographs he made later in life, street photography on trips to NYC, and reading portions of his journal.  I came across this. 


Ah, shit.  And so it goes.  

It was time to move.  I went into the house and placed the book back on the shelf.  I grabbed the cat food and filled the cat's bowl.  I grabbed my keys, locked the house, and walked to the car.  The cat walked forward toward me.  She did not want, I understood, for me to go.  She takes comfort from my sitting with her on the deck.  I talked with her long enough that she turned away and approached her food.  I looked back at the house, the light falling hard upon the wooden siding and thought again that I should be out making pictures.  I grabbed a camera out of the camera bag, one of the Leicas with a 90mm lens on it.  I framed up the shot and gently depressed the shutter.  I looked at the image on the digital screen.  Oh, my. . . yes. . . I should be out taking photographs.  

This morning when I downloaded the picture, I was completely unimpressed.  Sadly so.  But I must post it anyway.  That is the way the day begins, late with a lingering malaise, a hangover from the night before.  

Perhaps today, I will begin to concentrate on my diet.  I have grown fat.  I disgust myself.  But calories are all I have right now, my only pleasure.  I had decided that I would indulge myself.  What did it matter?  Food and drink.  But we all know how that works out.  I must begin to pay attention.  

I feel like Faurer, I'm afraid.  

"It seems unfair."

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride

 I'm still taking photos like this one.  It is from a walk I took from my mother's house through a neighborhood with big houses on small lots.  You won't find kids playing in the front yards here.  You know what happens to kids who go outside.  Most of them are snatched and never heard from again.  It's a shame, but now parents are forced to keep their children even after they tire of them.  But there is good news.  "Biden," as "they" say, is going to give parents money for every kid they have.  That's right!  If you have kids, whether you can afford them or not . . . . 

"Biden" is also giving people who didn't want the rigors of a real college, people who opted for unaccredited mill factories (whether they actually "graduated" or not) their ill-spent money back.  Trillions of it.  

If you worked two or three jobs to put yourself through the local community college, you get nothing.  If you didn't have kids, you get nothing.  

WTF?  

So Fox livestreams Trump rallies.  I watched one with my mother a couple nights ago.  He actually said, "The Democrats. . . have you heard. . . all they talk about is race, race, race. . . ."

I was stunned.  But, you know. . . all those white hillbillies with six kids who enrolled at Trump U. and didn't complete, they are getting benefits.  And still, who do you think they are going to vote for?  

I have gotten nothing, not a dime, from the U.S. government, and I pay more taxes than Trump.  If you are not retired, you may not know this, but the government taxes Social Security benefits.  Does that make sense?  How much money does it cost to give out dollars to retirees then pay people to get a portion of it back?  I would love to know that figure.  I've tried finding it, but I've had no luck.  

I'm betting that China will buy Cuba.  Haiti. . . I don't know.  Not so much, not unless they are interested in the Dominican Republic, too.  But I don't think it is a long shot that they will replace the old Soviet interests in Cuba if for no other reason to show the U.S. what it is like to have a military presence just off your coast.  Taiwan, I mean.  

The Cuban people have been looking for U.S. help for a long time.  It has never come.  

The liberal media keeps pushing the Climate Hoax and the Virus Hoax.  They keep saying there was no election fraud, that Biden is a legitimate president.  When will it end?

Do yourself a little favor.  Don't turn on Fox News, not even to please your mother.  It is unbelievable that everyone associated with that network isn't locked up for. . . do we have a law against hateful lying?  Surely.  But they are clever.  Like Trump, they always pose a facetious question and then answer, "If that is true. . . ."  You know.  I've heard people say.  

My mother thinks I'm a maniac for yelling at the television.  She believes me to be unhinged until she needs help dealing with insurance companies or wants me to do something for her online.  Then, you know, I'm a genius.  

Once in awhile, I get to watch something on t.v. The other afternoon, I played a documentary called "Riding the Dog" made in 1989.  It is about riding Greyhound buses.  I did that for months when I travelled around the country after college in 1975.  What a ride.  And though the doc was made eleven years later, it has some of the flavor I remembered.  As I watched, I wanted to grab my camera and go again, just ride a Greyhound out west, stopping to eat the most hideous restaurants in the country.  I still remember conversations I had and people I met all those years ago.  I never did get around to finishing the novel I started writing about it when I got home.  It is a shame.  I've reread the first thirty pages, which is all I completed, and they weren't bad at all.