oftheherd
Veteran
back alley said:i've had the misfortune to live in 2 different houses that had their basements flood, big time.
prints were destroyed, books of notes and writings and negs too.
some of the negs i saved but i was too depressed to do the work to save them all.
now i pack everything in rubbermaid totes and if flooded again, i think at worst they will float away.
i just started over.
big time cleansing/metamorphosis.
and less to carry forward.
Interesting. I had the experience of going through a house fire. I lost some camera gear, some photographs, and about 8000-10,000 slides and all negatives were badly damaged. Not to mention other personal property and family keepsakes. It takes a lot out of a person. Twice would be hard to take.
back alley said:i guess the point is/was that sometimes it's good to shed the skin and start growing another.
losing that stuff was hard at first but almost liberating in the end.
i don't feel so attached to anything anymore.
How did you put it away so easily? I certainly have never felt the liberation. It is only recently that I have begun to try and salvage the negatives. Don't know if I will ever try the slides. My photography has been little more than famliy snapshots at home and on trips. I have acquired a lot of gear, more old cameras, some more recent, some folders and LF gear. Not using most of it. I never lost my ability to photograph, nor my desire. Just the will I guess. Of course there were some other factors; I retired from the military and began a several year search for a second career. Not too long afterward, my wife developed a dibilitating condition of constant pain, the kids went to college. Lots of changes.
Life still has a lot of good things, not the least of which is my grandson, a favorite photo subject. I carry a camera of one kind or another all the time. I am just not as likely to use it as before. Nor am I as likely to see something and spend a lot of time trying to get photos.
Hey Bill, let's start a club. 😕