No "digital manipulation" - I read that as they're scanned directly to a
JPEG and the resulting digital files were not processed in Photoshop
before uploading.
The Kodak scientists & our narrator may have never seen this kind of
thing before, but I have.
This summer while house cleaning I found a two rolls film in archival
negative protectors with contact sheets that I thought I'd thrown away
after Hurricane Fran took my roof off in 1996. They had the same kind of
damage to the emulsion.
On 11/1/2014 4:26 AM, mike wilson wrote:
The blurb writer certainly imbibed. I'm very curious as to how the
images arrived on my computer screen without any digital intervention.
But that's by-the-by. Coincidentally, I have just read a book about
one of the subjects. The model Georgia Durant has had,let's say, a
very interesting life.
http://www.thecompanyshekeeps.com/
On 30 October 2014 11:30, Mark Roberts <[email protected]> wrote:
Neil Montanus is an 87-year-old photographer who spent decades
shooting for Kodak. In the course of his job he did travel photography
all over the world and shots portraits of people like Walt Disney and
Gerald Ford.
A couple of years ago he found a carousel of slides he'd stored in a
damp corner of his basement and forgotten for decades. Bacteria had
eaten into the gelatine emulsion on the slides. Perhaps Neil did some
of the brown acid in the 60's, but he decided he liked the effect:
http://www.montanusphotography.com/neil_montanus_bio/latestwork.htm
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