minor bit of humor...

W

wlewisiii

Guest
I was taking our babysitter home and while walking her up to the apartment complexes front door, one of the older maintenance workers noticed my Moskva 5 hanging around my neck (folded up and in the lower half only of the never-ready case. I always have some camera with me these days. The influence of RFF I'm sure... :) ) "Oh a Land camera?" "No, roll film." "Ah, those were nice too." "I like to work for my pictures." He then gave me a thumbs-up and went on his way. It just struck me as interesting to run into someone who associated a folder with polaroid film. Been awhile since I'd seen someone do that... :D

William
 
At one time I got approached by someone because I was carrying a Mamiya TLR. "Good to see someone using a real camera for a change!" he said.

Good he didn't assume it was a digital! :eek:
 
I love going around with my babies... yesterday I've been leaving work earlier, to go visit my colleagues located at our embassy building in Prague, and I was shooting with my FED-3b / I-61 L/D and the KMZ Turret viewfinder, most were looking at me with big eyes, like "what the hell is this stuff ?" ... of course all people I met on my way (except a young girl) were using digital compact cameras, some had a dslr for a change... Anyway I should have at least one or two great photos!

Just my little contrib ;)
 
Yeah i look pretty wierd with my fed-2, it's very large compared to their cams...

Once i went out at 7 am walking by the sea shore, in summer there's only old men who went out fishing and workers, so it was like empty and no one had cameras, and most people were sleepy with half closed eyes...

And then while taking some shots, some old guy approached me and gave me some 5 L.E (approaches a dollar)!!!!

Is that how people think with people who walk around with old cams???
 
I was cornered on July 4th by an Ethan Frome looking gentleman who was also photographing at the parade I attended. "Why lookiee thar, a late model Leica shoot'in film." as he approached. I saw the strap around his shoulder so I was prepared when he slipped his hand to his side and swung what was attached to it forward, all while in full gangly stride. "I love my rangefinder, a Konica C35, I can shoot her with flash at all shutter speeds, perfect for a bright day like today."

"She is a beauty, gotta love those leaf shutters. Have a great day at the parade" I said returning to my hunting.

What was most striking though was the Yankee Ingenuity displayed by my new friend's camera. It was evident by the wood and duct tape which was clearly visible on this home made rig. It was a Konica C35 as he said, and was well used, a shooter's camera. The flash was mounted though to a home made handle mount. Maybe it started life as a flash handle, but it was morphed into something super, perfect for the needs of its user. The handle was wooden, and slightly longer than the norm. The bottom of the dowel was taped to the bracket, but of more interest was the older, smaller Vivitar flash unit taped to the top, surely chosen for its bounce head. There seemed to be a cord of some type, also taped against the handle, I assume it was a PC connection.

No doubt my bud had picked this rig to use on July 4th because it was battle tested and one he was comfortable with. I bet he ended up getting more keepers that day than I did with my M6 and 35 Summicron.
 
Another minor bit of humor –

Another minor bit of humor –

Okay, I got one! I got one! :D

So I’m standing at a garage sale talking with a young lady who has just invested [heavily] in a big dog digital. She’s telling me how much money she can make shooting weddings and I tell her how much I don’t make by preaching them.

But, she’s inquisitively looking over my Zorki 1, holding it like a baby T-Rex - you know, that, “It’s cute, but what is it?” sort of look on her face.

Up walks her 12-year-old son who leans on the table to check out the Russian hardware and listen in on the conversation. He finally decides to join in:
“How many mega-pixels is it?”
Mom helps out: “It doesn’t have mega-pixels. It uses film.”
“Huh?”
“Film! It uses film, it’s not digital.”

Little Johnny is totally lost now. His brain is saying, “web page not available offline.” So I help him out.

I take the camera from his mother and place it in his hands gently. Sounding like a hillbilly faking a foreign accent I tell him, “Eez like deez, my son. In the motherland, we doan judge the quality of our camera wit tee mega-pixels. No, no we doan do it diss way. In the old country, the best cameras are evaluated NOT in mega-pixels, but in dee kilos. Yes, in kilos.”

I wait quietly for a response, wondering if his three years in the third grade taught him what a kilo is. Then, finally, I see the light come on.

Lifting the Zorki up and down in his hands, he slowly grins, “This must be a good one!”
 
How about one more.

Some friends were camping at a nearby state park with their kids... kind of one of those vacations where dad can still get up and go to work if needs be. Huh? I dunno. But anyway... we drove out one afternoon to just hang out with ‘em for awhile.

So we're sittin' around the ol' campfire just yackin' while the two young folk and their tag-along-cousin, Austin, were snappin' pictures with mom's digital P&S, passing it back and forth, laughing at the little screen on the back and basically annoying the heck out of everyone.

Finally, Tag-along gets curious, looks at me and asks, "Can I see YOUR camera?"

Instantly and in unison, every adult present barks, "No! ..... No, no, no!" Then they all start tag-team bashing the poor kid. "Don't EVEN let him touch your camera. He breaks EVERYTHING he touches. I'm not kidding. He's a walking disaster. He's only twelve and he's on his 4th bicycle… broke an anvil once... his mom only feeds him on PAPER plates!"

"Ah, he won't hurt it," I replied as I handed it over to him [gently]. The crowd gasped and then fell into total silence. Every eye around the campfire was locked on the young terror, Austin, and the Zorki.

I tried my hardest to put on my best fake “He’s-a-good-boy-I’m-not-worried” grin. But in the back of my mind, I'm thinking, "Punk, this is a 1956 first year Zorki 4. No doubt the only one you'll ever see in you whole, miserable, calamity-infested life. If you so much as even breath on it wrong, I'm going to hang you from that tree over there with the brown leather Gordy's Neck Strap that's on it and pummel you so bad with the rest of it, they won’t be able to identify you in a DNA lab!"

Of course, the inevitable next question had to come. “Can I take a picture with it?”

“Sure!” I confidently replied, although I think my voice may have trembled ever so slightly, with a barely recognizable squeak changing “sure” into a two-syllable word. “I’ll show ya.”

Out of the corner of my eye, I see the oldest daughter of our friends reach slowly for her SLR that I had given her some months ago, and bring it to her eye to catch a shot of me giving the Master of Disaster quick photog instructions on focusing. I’m in mid-sentence when he realizes he’s about to have his picture taken. He suddenly jerks the FSU to his eye, aims it back at the other camera-bug and begins to feverishly mash everything that feels like a button on top.

He finally hits the right one. “Ker-schlam!” the Russian photographic instrument fires with the vibration of gears, levers and slamming shutter curtains pulsing through his pansy pre-pubescent fingers and freckled cheekbone. The immediate look on his face was evidence he’d never before heard anything remotely like that come from mom’s digicam. His eyeballs snapped out on their stems and his mouth fell limply open though no oxygen was going in or coming out. Ever so gradually he eased the Zorki back down to his lap while his unblinking gaze on me could easily be read that he was wondering how many nanoseconds he had to remain on this Earth.

I didn’t say a word. I waited, staring back, memorizing his expression. In what seemed to take an eternity, he at last mustered the courage to speak.

“Is it broken?”

Here's the result of Austin's catastrophe.

>>>
MaggieShooter-1.jpg
 
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great story! but the URL for the picture doesn't work for me

that reminds me of the time I handed my nearly new Nikon D70 to my very young niece so she could take a photo of Grandpa.. I ought to dig up that shot and post it because it somehow perfectly shows how a 3 year old sees adults

and yes, everyone in the room was aghast that I let her hold a camera that cost 4 figures
 
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hehe, good stories:)

CVBLZ, while the story is funny, it is also a bit sad, that guy has already in his reflexes that whatever he uses he will break it. Poor guy. But let us see that image!
 
go to the website 'ghostsofkragnarosk' sp? and scroll down to the lady in the hat with the SLR 'Maggie' et voila as we sez in Canada
 
i mostly get "how old is that camera?" but i did have a grade nine student of mine ask me how to set the white balance on a ql17 i was loaning him...his parents kiboshed the sale though as they were anti-film :D there is only so much I can do to educate the young...heh
 
It's actually true that I think I've lost count of the number of times over the last 2 or 3 years that I've been asked whether my Rollei 35 or Minox 35GT is digital or not. My answer has always been accompanied by a look of disbelief that 35 mm film could fit into either of them! (The converse has been the many comments that a Canon G2 is far too big to be digital.) It's strange this world of proper cameras...
 
same thing when I was carrying around my Minox 35PL.. and with it being a scale focus camera that I wouldn't have to use the viewfinder with, people wouldn't even believe that I was taking photos without having it glued to my face
 
Little Prince said:
Funny stories and articulation. You can tell someone here really likes kids :). He He.
Thanks for the great comments. I attached the photo above.

Yeah, I did Youth Ministry for over a decade before doing foreign church planting and now pastoring. My wife says I'll die a 100 year old teenager. But I am always trying to get kids to take pictures... with anything... digital, film, throw-away, cell phone, anything. Just notice what's around you and create!!
 
Pherdinand said:
hehe, good stories:)

CVBLZ, while the story is funny, it is also a bit sad, that guy has already in his reflexes that whatever he uses he will break it. Poor guy. But let us see that image!
And, oh yeah. You can bet as soon as I got the picture back, I immediately e-mailed it to the kid and told him what a great job he did!
 
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