vdonovan
Vince Donovan
John those are great shots! Are they in the Sierra by any chance? I'm a back country skier myself, and it's great to see the equipment (and the fashion!) of skiers back in the day.
Don't take this too seriously but
you realise that as soon as you post the photos on the internet they are worthless.
With that many rolls there is a possibility to do something worthwhile with the photos. Don't ruin it by posting low res scans
on the internet to satisy a few people who read a forum.
Keith,
Perhaps contact the National Film and Sound Archive in Canberra to see what advice they can offer.
www.nfsa.gov.au
Christopher.
These are incredible, Keith. What a fantastic project to be involved in! I hope you are able to post some of the results!
It reminds me of a personal experience.
Last year, I discovered that one of my Mum's old cameras still had film in it, so I decided - what the heck - to develop it. Before I did that I took a photo of my wife, as there were a couple of frames left in the little red window (it was a Kodak folder camera).
When I developed the film (HP4) and looked at the results, there was the picture of my wife that I'd taken, but also a picture of what looked like my 18 year old son. But I hadn't taken a photo of him! After some confusion I realized the photo was of me - my Mum (who has now passed away) must have taken it when I was about that age. I'm now 54. So my wife and I appear on the same roll, years apart. How I love photography!
A friend of mine had an opportunity like this last year. The son of an old man he knows brought him a couple rolls of film that were in the old Leica canisters, but they were a heavy cardboard type canister, not the metal ones like in you pics. My friend is a pro photographer so the son asked if he could scan the rolls for him so he could see what's on them and share it with his family.
Well, the sons father was a German soldier during WWII and a photographer too. The rolls contained pics of a downed American plane, some shots from a sea port, and shots of an aerial battle from the deck of a ship. My friend gave me copies of the scans. We were the first people to see these since the father developed them and put them away during the war. Great stuff.
Hope you get some good stuff there, have fun!