explain your avatar

My chirpy lady with a tripod is the endpaper from a c1914 Ensign Handbook - complete with little inserts stating that there might be difficulties in supply due to the ongoing difficulties, and dated March 1915.

Nowadays you'd call it a catalogue, and it would probably be online rather than a vest pocket-sized hard bound book.

Adrian
 
Its interesting to go back and read the explanations on the first page (since the avatars have changed!)
 
A pinhole camera paper negative image of a silver gelatin 11"x14" self-portrait print hanging from backyard clothesline; the self-portrait was printed from a 4x5 film negative exposed in a Speed Graphic. Kind of format -blending.

~Joe
 
It's kind of fun to go through earlier posts in this thread when avatar pictures changed but the descriptions are still original.
 
The old and the new. My 1958 M2 given to me in 1977 and the ZM C Sonnar acquired in 2009, an old lens design in a new iteration and a lens which inspired one of the rejuvenations of my photography
 
I climbed poles for telephone installations and repairs for 38 1/2 years.
Retired last year.
...Terry

My father did the same thing. He was a lineman and then a fiber-optics technician and finally a regional construction manager for GTE, which became Verizon right before he retired. He still has his set of climbing hooks that strapped to his work boots to climb poles.

In the southern Indiana area that he managed in his last years with the company, there was an old lineman who was 75 years old, who worked for the company for 55 yrs! He was in perfect health, and refused to retire. My dad said the old man was earning 125,000 a year because the law required the company to pay him his pension alongside his regular pay because of his age and long service...and his regular pay was really high because he had been on the job so long, getting yearly raises.
 
I work at Rite Aid, as did my friend, at a separate location. He took a few test strips from the minilab and taped them together, then shot the roll with a really crappy minolta P&S while we got hammered.
 
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