unohuu
Established
Would like to take a class, but I have been too busy shooting to have someone talk down to me about my street and lab experience.
VinceC said:I joined the Army (U.S.) in 1981 and my training as a public affairs specialist included a week of photography and darkroom work. It wasn't until I was stationed in Germany a couple of years later that I really got interested in photography. I was running a small one-person weekly installation newspaper and had to take the pictures for it, so I had a swift, steep learning curve. Like one of the other forum members, I spent a huge amount of time in an Army craft shop photo lab, this one in Garlstedt, near Bremen and Bremerhaven. The exchange rate was really cheap in those days, so I was able to by a box of 100 sheets of photo paper for about $25 from the German photo stores, and I went through many, many boxes. Also pored through magazines and books. Mostly, too, photography gave me a reason to head off base on weekends in search of new pictures and places. The Army issued me a Canon F1. For my second body, I sold my Pentax to another GI and bought a Nikomat at a German camera shop.
Several assignments later, in 1988, the Army sent me to a summerlong photojournalism course at the University of South Carolina. Ten weeks of total immersion for 10-12 hours a day. That was my only formal schooling.
VinceC said:I joined the Army (U.S.) in 1981 and my training as a public affairs specialist included a week of photography and darkroom work. It wasn't until I was stationed in Germany a couple of years later that I really got interested in photography. I was running a small one-person weekly installation newspaper and had to take the pictures for it, so I had a swift, steep learning curve.