• site home
  • blog home
  • galleries
  • contact
  • underwater
  • the bleeding edge

the last word

Photography meets digital computer technology. Photography wins -- most of the time.

You are here: Home / The Last Word / Tales of a misspent youth

Tales of a misspent youth

March 21, 2019 JimK 3 Comments

I’ve got more to say about the camera/car testing analogy, but I just saw this post today on DPR.

Maybe I’m in my dottage, but it took me back to my days as a high-school newspaper photographer. I worked in a shared darkroom, with collective responsibility for keeping the communal chemicals fresh, replenished, and properly mixed and labeled. Anybody ever lived in a commune? Me neither, but I am reminded of a great Larry Summers quote:

Nobody ever washed a rental car.

Now, in what passes for photojournalism at the high school level, missed focus is forgivable. So is harsh printing. So are thin negs (needs #5 paper? Go for it!).

But what is definitely not OK is missing the shot entirely.

So I always approached the labeling of the shared chemicals with deep suspicion. I, ahem, developed coping strategies that saved my bacon from time to time.

  • Smell the putative stop bath.
  • Sniff that self-identified fixer
  • And — this was the bridge too far for my fellow photo-newshounds — taste the developer.

We didn’t have color chemistry to contend with. Nobody was selenium toning their prints. But viewed from my present perspective, this doesn’t seem like a safe move. But it worked. Dektol tastes vaguely like peanut butter, and Microdol like, well, I don’t know exactly, but not at all like Dektol.

I seemed to have survived, though. Or do you think my photo-geekiness is chemically induced?

The Last Word

← Testing cameras like cars Lap times as lab testing →

Comments

  1. JG says

    March 22, 2019 at 3:50 pm

    As it happens, I did wash a rental car once — a Shelby CSX-T that I’d co-rented with a friend for a track day because my track car was broken at the time — but only after I had spun it off the track into the talcum powder-like dirt at 80 mph with both windows down, as the organizers required.

    Oops!

    I spent many quarters at a self-service car wash somewhere between Firebird Raceway and Sky Harbor airport cleaning up the mess I’d made and was ultimately successful enough I believe the lot jockeys at Thrifty’s check-in counter didn’t have any clue where the car had been earlier that day. Well, except maybe for the chunking shoulders on the front tires…

    P.S.: I wasn’t the only one who had this idea, either. Because the other two CSX-Ts in town were at the track that day as well. ;^)

    Reply
  2. Steve McQueen says

    April 2, 2019 at 6:58 am

    Normally I’d be mad about people abusing a Shelby but after googling CSX-T I feel you should have pushed as many of those cars off a cliff as possible.

    Geez they made some horrendous cars in the 80s.

    Reply
  3. Jeffrey Behr says

    July 30, 2019 at 3:23 pm

    “As it happens, I did wash a rental car once …” Wow; I knew who the author was before I looked at the header. 🙂

    JG, did you ever think you had a writing style? You apparently do, altho I couldn’t describe yours any better than I could describe mine.

    Your BFFL, Jeffrey the Behr

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

May 2025
S M T W T F S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    

Articles

  • About
    • Patents and papers about color
    • Who am I?
  • How to…
    • Backing up photographic images
    • How to change email providers
    • How to shoot slanted edge images for me
  • Lens screening testing
    • Equipment and Software
    • Examples
      • Bad and OK 200-600 at 600
      • Excellent 180-400 zoom
      • Fair 14-30mm zoom
      • Good 100-200 mm MF zoom
      • Good 100-400 zoom
      • Good 100mm lens on P1 P45+
      • Good 120mm MF lens
      • Good 18mm FF lens
      • Good 24-105 mm FF lens
      • Good 24-70 FF zoom
      • Good 35 mm FF lens
      • Good 35-70 MF lens
      • Good 60 mm lens on IQ3-100
      • Good 63 mm MF lens
      • Good 65 mm FF lens
      • Good 85 mm FF lens
      • Good and bad 25mm FF lenses
      • Good zoom at 24 mm
      • Marginal 18mm lens
      • Marginal 35mm FF lens
      • Mildly problematic 55 mm FF lens
      • OK 16-35mm zoom
      • OK 60mm lens on P1 P45+
      • OK Sony 600mm f/4
      • Pretty good 16-35 FF zoom
      • Pretty good 90mm FF lens
      • Problematic 400 mm FF lens
      • Tilted 20 mm f/1.8 FF lens
      • Tilted 30 mm MF lens
      • Tilted 50 mm FF lens
      • Two 15mm FF lenses
    • Found a problem – now what?
    • Goals for this test
    • Minimum target distances
      • MFT
      • APS-C
      • Full frame
      • Small medium format
    • Printable Siemens Star targets
    • Target size on sensor
      • MFT
      • APS-C
      • Full frame
      • Small medium format
    • Test instructions — postproduction
    • Test instructions — reading the images
    • Test instructions – capture
    • Theory of the test
    • What’s wrong with conventional lens screening?
  • Previsualization heresy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Recommended photographic web sites
  • Using in-camera histograms for ETTR
    • Acknowledgments
    • Why ETTR?
    • Normal in-camera histograms
    • Image processing for in-camera histograms
    • Making the in-camera histogram closely represent the raw histogram
    • Shortcuts to UniWB
    • Preparing for monitor-based UniWB
    • A one-step UniWB procedure
    • The math behind the one-step method
    • Iteration using Newton’s Method

Category List

Recent Comments

  • JimK on Goldilocks and the three flashes
  • DC Wedding Photographer on Goldilocks and the three flashes
  • Wedding Photographer in DC on The 16-Bit Fallacy: Why More Isn’t Always Better in Medium Format Cameras
  • JimK on Fujifilm GFX 100S II precision
  • Renjie Zhu on Fujifilm GFX 100S II precision
  • JimK on Fuji 20-35/4 landscape field curvature at 23mm vs 23/4 GF
  • Ivo de Man on Fuji 20-35/4 landscape field curvature at 23mm vs 23/4 GF
  • JimK on Fuji 20-35/4 landscape field curvature at 23mm vs 23/4 GF
  • JimK on Fuji 20-35/4 landscape field curvature at 23mm vs 23/4 GF
  • Ivo de Man on Fuji 20-35/4 landscape field curvature at 23mm vs 23/4 GF

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Daily Dish Pro On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Unless otherwise noted, all images copyright Jim Kasson.