NickTrop
Veteran
...because often the most emotionally impactful photos are simple snaps of loved ones lost. Post yours, in memoriam, if you wish.

Shac
Well-known
In memoriam - I'm at the age where one loses too many of one's friends


charjohncarter
Veteran
RObert Budding
D'oh!
airfrogusmc
Veteran
My father

rhl-oregon
Cameras Guitars Wonders
My sister Susan on her deathbed, haloed by my fedora in a double exposure with an X-E1/35 1.4, January 2013.

rhl-oregon
Cameras Guitars Wonders
My brother Anderson saying a Buddhist prayer to our mother, July 3 2012. She had breathed out her last breath 5 minutes earlier.
I had been with her for several days, and after she left conscious awareness, I made a number of exposures in that little room with a Rolleiflex 2.8D, a Lumix G1/20 1.7, and a Ricoh GXR / 50 2.0 Planar. Above is the GXR.
Both of these were the 2.8D, wide open, HP5.

I had been with her for several days, and after she left conscious awareness, I made a number of exposures in that little room with a Rolleiflex 2.8D, a Lumix G1/20 1.7, and a Ricoh GXR / 50 2.0 Planar. Above is the GXR.


Both of these were the 2.8D, wide open, HP5.
Moto-Uno
Moto-Uno

My mother , a year and a half before she passed . Peter
mcfingon
Western Australia
My friend Geoff, who died on the 5th of July, 2018.
John Mc

John Mc
rhl-oregon
Cameras Guitars Wonders

Early 2015, my wife and son after her consultation with oncologists in Portland. I posed them against the tai chi crossed by branch shadows for my own reasons. Ovarian cancer is a terminal disease, no matter the term. She had another year and a half, and lived as well (“lovingly, generously and with courage” was her motto) as she could.
A7, Contax Planar 45/2
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