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First Commercial Airbus A380 Flight
Posted in events, informational, photographs, travel
Tagged A380, Airbus, airlines, Australia, aviation, commercial flight, inaugural flight, Kingsford Smith Airport, Singapore AIrlines, SQ380, Sydney
2 Comments
An Unexpected Image
A Miscue Turns a Photo Into a Favorite
During the 60’s my favorite pastime was photography.
Having only an after school part time job, I used used many techniques to make an expensive hobby more affordable.
I remember buying 100-foot long “bulk film” to reload 35mm cartridges into shorter five foot 36-exposure lengths. This was enough for 18 cartridges of film – enough for the summer season for about the same cost as buying 6 individual rolls of Kodak or Ansco film.
Next I learned how to develop my own film. I constructed a small darkroom in my parents’ basement where I would hang the still-wet film on a clothesline to dry. Not long after I earned enough to buy an enlarger. Wow, I was in photo heaven. The enlarger let me make my own prints and I would patiently watch the image slowly appear (under a safelight) in the developing solution. I was having all of this fun for a fraction of the cost of sending the spent film to my local photofinisher.
Mine was a hobby was like that of many others where you just seem to keep spending your earning for the latest gadgets – easel for holding photographic paper, new developing trays for bigger enlargements, paper dryers for drying prints, color drum for making color prints, etc.
Perhaps you can now see that my association with photography goes back a very long time.
From all of those years spent in the darkroom in the 60s and 70’s there is one event that I remember well. It was a darkroom miscue that had a happy result.
But first a quick intro to how to develop a roll of 35mm black and white film:
In a dark, lightproof room, you remove the exposed film from its cartridge and slide it onto a metal reel. The reel is placed into a stainless steel tank with a specially designed top which lets you complete the development in normal room light. Pour the developer solution into the tank for a designated time – usually 6 to 8 minutes and then pour the developer solution out of the tank . Next pour plain water into the tank for one minute to halt the film development and discard the water. Then pour in the final solution called fixer for 5 minutes. This desensitizes the film from light and makes the image permanent. Now it’s safe to remove the film from the tank and give it a final rinse wash in water for ten minutes.
These operations are done with all of the liquids – developer, water and fixer – at a temperature of 68 degrees F. On one occasion, I inadvertently washed a developed roll at a colder temperature. I wasn’t paying attention and unknown to me at the time the final rinse water must have been a lot colder.
I removed the film from the reel and hung it on a line to dry. But when I finally looked, several of the frames looked very weird.
Sometimes a mistake turns into a favorite.
Written by: Arnie Lee
Posted in informational, personal, photographs, presentation, printing, technical, tips
Tagged b&w, darkroom, develop, developer, enlarger, fixer, reticulation
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About This Photo – Summer 1970
Memorable Photos
I’ve thoroughly enjoyed photography since I was a youngster. So my picture taking has spanned more than five decades.
The photos that I take belong to one of two “camps” – snapshots and memorable.
This article is the another in a series I’ve named “About this photo” to draw attention to a few of those memorable photos that may be hiding in a shoebox or on your hard drive.
Some individuals have photographic memories. I instead have memories about certain photographs.
Most of these special photographs were taken long, long ago. They are indelible and remain riveted in my mind. And so, in this “About this photo” series, I’d like to key in on one of these unforgettable photographs to bring me back to the time and circumstances under which it was taken.
Taken summer 1970, this is a photo of my girlfriend along Lake Michigan. We spent many weekends at this beach.Usually the beach was very crowded, but on this cloudy and windy day, we had the run of the sand and shore to ourselves.
The red lighthouse is a familiar site to anyone who knows this area and remains a key attraction to the beach. It’s a coincidence that my girlfriend’s jacket was about the same shade of red as the lighthouse.
The reason that this photo is etched in my mind is that I’ve been married to this lovely lady for 50+ years.

Let’s skip forward 40+ years. This photo was taken a few summers ago. Here we have two young girls having fun at the same location.
You can see the same red lighthouse albeit at a slightly different angle.
These are two of our young grandchildren. As we walked along the beach I was reminded of the 1970 photograph as we saw the lighthouse.
I asked the two girls to pose on the bench in the foreground. This photo captures the familiar feelings of warmth and affection that has somehow remained with me for more than 50 years..

Along the way, I’ve taken a huge number of snapshots. However, the number of memorable photos that I’ve taken is far smaller. Yet it’s the memorable ones that have a magical ability to steer emotions, feelings and pleasure into our minds, even years later. Simply amazing.
Written by
Arnie Lee
Posted in events, informational, kids, landscapes, online, personal, photographs, portraits, presentation, stills, tips, travel
Tagged about this photo, beach, girlfriend, grandkids, Lake Michigan, lighthouse, summer
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