Range-rover
Veteran
The PAX M3 that Sam gave away found a new home with Bob who is very capable in giving this compact 35mm fixed lens rangefinder the TLC it deserves. The lens is a 45mm F2.8 that I would suspect is likely a tessar design. I mailed it off to Bob last week for recycling.
I'm still on paid leave, but I'm here at work conditioning the cyclotron to keep it operational. There is some smut and buzz about a $2M grant being submitted to overhaul my cyclotron. Know that this would require months of work to implement.
Many things like the above have somewhat firmed up my future. Glad that it looks like I will enjoy continued employment. Also "Maggie" has come to reason that the fresher air of the lower Hudson Valley is where we want to be. One reason is that NYC certainly has changed, and tough times we expect ahead for many.
Kinda funny is how the rents have taken a dive. I could move and afford to live in Chelsea, Greenwich Village or even the Flat Iron district. East Harlem got more edge-G.
I know that hungry people and hungry children caused Arab Spring. Beacon is looking really good right now, and pretty much Maggie wants to buy a home next year, and I will commute.
Looking at properties online is mucho exciting. There was this carriage house that was ideal, but it sold. Found a nice house in town that had a large lot, an oversized garage, and was updated into turnkey condition with all the touches I would have performed.
Don't tell "Maggie" but the garage would be for a wood working shop with a Powermatic 10 inch table saw, and a Powermatic planer; the basement would be my darkroom; and the attic my print studio.
Over the past two weeks I have built out a new body of work. I ended up destroying a lot of old prints because everything got elevated to a new level. I could never sell the older work, and now my printing has vastly surpassed what I already was doing at a very high level.
My studio is kinda like living and working in a submarine. My rich brother told me about his experience in the Navy on a nuclear attack submarine. When they got deployed he had to crouch when walking down the hallways, because gallon cans of food he had to walk on. Evidently the only reason to return to port was to reload with food.
Somehow I found a pack of 49 sheets of 8 1/2x11 where only one sheet was missing to make it a full pack. I decided to create a book inspired by John that he called "People." This project is really interesting in that even in my small prints, the detail and the tonality resemble medium and I dare say large format. The files are the same, but now I enjoy the IQ that transcends all my print formats.
My old prints I somehow left behind. This is why I destroy a lot of my older work. I remember this art dealer showing me a Robert Franks print he owned from "The Americans" that obviously was just a test print that indicated a dusty negative. Pretty much I never want this to ever happen to any of my work.
So I am down to my last 17 inch roll, a box of 13x17 is gone that comprises of some of a small folio, and I have a museum box that is approaching nearly full of 17x24 1/2 sheets that will be for my "Book of Proofs." About half the pages have the linen tape spines installed. This book exploits a museum box that had a "dropped side" that is engineered into the design of the book.
This Book of Proofs is very impressive.
The 13x19's were going to be my "Log Book" with interwoven pages for annotation, but the game has changed upon discovering the 8 1/2x11 stockpile. I now will reinvent this book of prints as just a small folio because I just like its size.
Last night I ran out of linen tape to build pages. I need to order a 17 inch wide roll of 45 GSM archival paper to interleave the pages for the Book of Proofs. I really like how the interleaving protects the prints. In a ways the binding also does well in protecting the prints and making them less fragile.
Since March 18th I have remained rather prolific. Also know that my hoarding, leftover a a scar/mark of poverty, has been an asset because I have all these stockpiles as resources.
On the biking front I discovered that Schwable, a German bike tire manufaturer, now makes a 24x2.3 inch Rocket Ron which if it fits my frame without rubbing updates and modernizes my two old retro IBIS Mountain Trials.
I'm going with the flow. This kinda is like Divine Intervention. 24 inch tires are an underserved part of the market, and getting a high ended optimized specialty tire in the size I need has always been the bain of this ultra short wheelbase bike that has the fast and twitchy steering that pretty much is my style, meaning unstable.
Anyways, for me the isolation and social distancing has been a great thing. I'm running low on ink, paper, and linen tape though. After this post I think I will try to order some. Last time though Jon Cone was out of stock of the 13x19 I use.
Cal
Thanks Cal, It's a cute little camera. I should be getting it to work.