My first photo -- my dad |
Then a couple of months later, I got a real camera for my birthday. It was an Argus 75. It was a fixed focus point-and-shoot camera much like a Kodak Brownie but with a twin-lens viewfinder. It used a roll of 620 film, and produced 2-1/4 inch square photos. I used it for several years taking pictures of neighborhood friends, vacations, whatever. Many of my shots came out all right, but I really had little idea of what made one picture better than another. I was mostly just concerned about capturing my subject, and had no concept of photography as art. But I did like looking at pictures. I loved looking at all the photos in Life magazine, and I suppose I must have had some understanding that there was something special about those photos that made me want to look at them.
Typical shot on backpacking trip |
I think it was around the time I started high school that I became aware of the photography of Ansel Adams by seeing a couple of his books. I loved his photos and I wanted to take shots like his. I began borrowing my dad's Kodak 35 and shooting some Kodachrome. It was a better camera, but now I had to be concerned about focus and exposure settings and there was more room for error. Focusing was a matter of using a split-image rangefinder, or just guessing at the distance setting. Exposure was a matter of making an educated guess about the shutter speed and f-stop settings. We didn't have a light meter until dad bought a hand held unit several years later. After doing that on one of the scout backpacking trips, I was kind of disappointed with my shots. I realized that I knew very little about taking good pictures.
Scout trip campfire |
Close-up with the folding Kodak |
I also began looking for books of photos by other photographers. I looked at most of the famous photographers of that time. I especially noticed Alfred Steiglitz, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Edward Weston. I began to appreciate the incredible range of possibliites, the many different kinds of subjects, the different styles. They were nearly all black and white photos, and I started using a lot more black and white film. I saw that I could have a lot more control of the image by doing my own developing and printing.
Dad's Kodak 35 was better suited to shooting Kodachrome than black and white, so I started using another of his cameras, a Kodak folding camera that was quite old. It used 620 roll film like my Argus and produced 2-1/4 x 3-1/2 inch negatives. I bought several filters, and began experimenting with their effect with black and white film. At first, I didn't bother trying to do my own developing, but as I got more into it, I wanted an enlarger.
Whenever I could, I went into a camera store in Walnut Creek where one of the salesmen knew a lot about photography, and he was patient with my questions. He sold me a big old enlarger for about $40, and I started playing around with it a lot at home. I also talked with him a lot about cameras, and what kind I would need to follow Ansel Adams system. He suggested an old Speed Graphic, the classic newspaper photographer's camera, which would allow me to shoot sheet film. But I couldn't see myself carrying around a camera that large, and the idea of using sheet film and carrying around film holders seemed impossibly tedious.
I stuck with both of dads cameras until I was out of high school, using the 35mm for slides, and the folding camera for black and white. Then I went on a Sierra Club Labor Day weekend trip to climb Banner Peak, and used the folding camera. I must have been too rough on it, because my pictures all were out of focus. The mechanics were pretty delicate, and I think I bent something so that it didn't fold out right anymore.
Back road near Davis, 1965 |
Pioneer Basin, 1967 |
By this time, I was in college at UC Davis, and between my school work and other interests, I didn't spend so much time on photography. But went back to it now and then, and my pictures got steadily better. When I began medical school at UC San Francisco, I made friends with a guy in the dorm who was also interested in photography and he inspired me to spend more time on it. He told me about a photography center in Duboce Park that he went to for developing and enlarging, and I started going too. They had a room with a couple of dozen enlargers in cubicles around tables with developing trays. I can't remember whether it cost anything, but it couldn't have been much. The prints went through a large dryer and dropped into a trough where everybody's prints were mixed together. It was a very social experience, sharing comments about other people's photos, and although I was shy about it at first, I got to like it.
In Golden Gate Park around 1967 |
Ocean Beach, San Francisco, 1967 |
For a long time, I had wished that I could go beyond the limitations of a fixed lens, and so I bought the cheapest SLR that I could find, a Mamiya Secor, with a 28mm and a 135mm lens. It was actually a pretty decent camera, and now I was free of a lot of limitations, including the need for a hand-held light meter. I was really enjoying my photography now, and spending more time on it even with the demands of medical school.
That lasted for a couple of years or so, and then one night, while I was visiting friends, someone stole the camera out of my car. It was quite a blow, and my dad took pity on me and offered to buy me a new camera. He had found out about some way to buy cameras from Hong Kong and get a good deal. The only thing was that when I picked it up at the airport, the customs inspectors made me grind off the brand name. That didn't really bother me. I didn't care what the camera looked like as long as it worked. It was a Topcon D-1, with two lenses like my stolen camera, a 28mm and a 135mm. It was a better camera than the Mamiya Secor, with sharp lenses and easy-to-use controls, and I loved it.
On Telegraph Avenue, Berkeley, 1969 |
Then after a few months, I answered a note on a bulletin board from a drummer looking for musicians, and I got very involved with music. After playing together a few times, the drummer and I found a house to rent on Gilman Street, and we spent the next couple of years playing with various bands and having a great time. But my photography got kind of put on the back burner for a while.
It wasn't too long before I was back into it again. When a friend, Maureen, from Southern California split up with her husband, Larry, she and I ended up together. She moved in with me, we moved to Oakland, and ten months later we got married. She got a job with the Welfare Department, and I was bored with the glue factory, so I quit.
I didn't have a very clear idea what I was going to do except that I wanted to try to make some money with photography. I had noticed that people were selling framed photos on the street and at crafts fairs, and I wanted to try it. I also tried taking photos of friends and selling them but that didn't get me very far. I figured that in order to make a profit on framed prints, I would need to be able to produce them cheaply. Our rented house had a dirt floored basement, and I cleared out a corner of it and made a crude darkroom and workshop out of it. I bought a better enlarger and some inexpensive equipment to develop color prints from negatives. I figured out a way to make my own frames. I made some masonite display boards. I printed up some of my best shots and took them over to the Embarcadero Plaza in San Francisco and Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley. I found out about several crafts fairs, and went to them too. I sold a few, but not nearly enough to make any profit. There were other problems too. My cheap glued together frames tended to fall apart. I had dry-mounted my prints to board and after a few hours in the sun, they started peeling off. So after several months and maybe half a dozen shows, I gave up.
Meanwhile, I had a few other ideas. I thought maybe we should join the hippie exodus that was taking place, people moving out into the country to live off the land. I had a copy of the Whole Earth Catalog, and we read the magazine, "Mother Earth News", and they were full of ways to get by in the country without a lot of money. I even thought of going out into the wilderness and living in a tent. It was a time when a whole lot of people were looking for new ways to live, ways to escape from the rat race and find more meaningful work.
One idea that I had was to do a book of photos, maybe with some kind of inspirational text. Then I thought of writing a book, some kind of "how to" book. I started writing something about music theory for rock and roll, but quickly realized that I didn't really know enough about it. I tried to think of a subject that I knew a lot about, and then it came to me that I could write about hiking trails in the East Bay. I started right in, writing about the parks that I was familiar with.
Cover shot for East Bay Trails, 1973 |
I kept working on the book, and decided that it should have photos too. I already had a lot of them that I could use, but I took my camera along whenever I went out on a trail. This was kind of a new angle on photography for me — taking pictures with an editorial purpose rather than just for art's sake. I liked this new approach. After a year or so of working on it, I finally had a rough manuscript together, and I took it around to several local publishers. None were interested, but then I discovered that some people had successfully published their own books. I found a printer, Dharma Press, that would be willing to produce my book for a reasonable price, and they helped me find a typesetter and got me starting learning about graphic design and pasteup.
I found some help in books, and from people that I met, but mostly I just figured out how to do on my own. I later learned many better ways to do it, but I managed to get it done. I spent many hours drawing maps with a Rapidograph pen and rub on type. I finally finished the book, and got it printed. I think I had 1000 copies printed for a little over a dollar a copy. I took it around to local book stores, and many were willing to carry it. It was priced at $5 a piece, and the book stores got a 40 percent discount. After a year or so, I found a distributor, Book People, to carry it. They got a larger discount, but they saved me the trouble of delivering books to stores. It turned out to be a modest success. Over a period of 7 or 8 years, I revised the book three times, and sold a total of around 15,000 copies. I would have kept it up, but by that time I had two kids and a stressful job requiring lots of overtime, and the idea of revising the book again seemed like too much work.
Then I had some more bad luck. We were living in East Oakland, off High Street near Brookdale Park, and some kids broke into our house and stole all of my cameras. The also got our TV, stereo, and a couple of guitars. I replaced the Topcon D-1 with a similar but larger camera, a D-2.
Glacier Peak Wilderness, 1977 |
Lyell Fork of the Merced, 1976 |
Pachena Bay, Vancouver Island, 1977 |
Plaskett Lake, Northern Coast Range |
Ebbetts Pass, early 80's |
In 1984, Maureen and I were planning a trip to Hawaii, and we thought that it was time to get a newer camera, one that she could use too. We bought a Minolta X-570 SLR with a 28-80 mm zoom lens. I loved not having to carry around an extra lens or two. It turned out that Maureen never used the camera much, but it became the only camera for me.
Over the years, I found that my pictures underwent subtle changes. For many years, I was trying to focus my attention on particular objects or areas of a scene to make an interesting composition. Then I began to think more about showing a whole environment, to bring the viewer into the action rather than standing back and looking at it. I went from using my telephoto lens a lot to using a wide angle lens more. And I found that to use a wide angle lens effectively, I usually had to get closer to my subject, to include something interesting in the foreground rather than focusing on a distant view. My ideas about composition changed a bit too. Some time in the early 70s, I remember seeing some interesting photos in a magazine. The were very powerful photos, but the composition was not classically centered and balanced like what I was used to. I started trying to think beyond some of the old-fashioned ideas that I had been working with. My sense of a balanced composition was pretty firmly entrenched, so I probably didn't go too far with this, but I kept it in mind.
My last few years at Olympic were not much fun. They kept taking away parts of my responsibilities and giving them to other departments. I finally quit and found a job doing computer prepress work at a large color separation house. Three months later, they went out of business, a victim of changing technology. I had a couple of other jobs doing prepress work, and finally got pretty good at it. Giving up supervising other employees was a big relief, and since then I've been much happier with my work.
Picadilly Circus, London, 1995 |
In 2000, Maureen and I were planning a trip to England and Ireland, and I wanted a smaller camera. In 1995 we had done a similar trip with the boys and carrying around my large Minolta SLR seemed a bit awkward. I thought about getting a digital camera, but they were still kind of expensive, and I found a small Pentax 35 mm with a zoom lens, and it worked out well. Most of the time I really didn't miss through-the-lens viewing, and I got lots of good shots. I put the camera to good use the following year, when a friend and I hiked the John Muir Trail. When you carry everything on your back for 200 miles, saving a few pounds can make a big difference.
Forester Pass on John Muir Trail, 2001 |
By 2003, I felt it was finally time to go digital, and bought a Minolta Dimage 7i, a five megapixel camera with a built-in lens with a zoom range similar to what I was used to. You couldn't really call it an SLR, but the viewfinder image was a small LCD screen, so I did see what came through the lens. The lens was quite large for that kind of camera, so it did pretty well in low light situations. It allowed me to shoot images in a "raw" format, but I soon
One of my first digital photos, Point Reyes, 2003 |
Even when I was still using film, I had already started playing around with things I could do to improve images. I cleaned up dirt specks, lightened and darkened images, did some color correction. At work, I had had plenty of experience with modifying images and I put those skills to use with some of my own. At one family gathering, my aunt wanted a photo of me and all of my cousins together. But one of the cousins wasn't there, so I got a shot of him another time and put him into the photo. One of the most challenging jobs at work was a large photo of a young woman in a bathing suit and a lei around her neck. The client didn't want the lei, so I removed it and rebuilt a large area of her chest so that it looked pretty natural.
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A Photoshop composite image |
Several years ago, in 2007, my Minolta just stopped working, so I got an Olympus E510 digital SLR with two zoom lenses, a 28-80 and an 80-300 (35 mm equivalents). It was the most compact digital SLR available, and the lenses were very compact too. Besides, it was a good deal less expensive than an equivalent Canon or Nikon. I was especially concerned with size because I wanted to use it for hiking and backpacking. It has worked out quite well for me.
Barrel Racing |