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You know you are getting old when:

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
2ln7iac.png



"Where's the screen?"
"Where's the on/off?"
"You mean you can't text?"
"No music?"
"No photos?"
"Why is it so heavy?"
"What's a party-line?"
"This is so weird!"
"How do you use it when you're driving?"
"Bummer!"

kids today. :)
 
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Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
I just thought of something. Twenty years from now, there will be an entire generation of adults, who never knew of a time when there was a limit to how much data you could use on your cell phone!
 

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
I wear T-Shirts, and am proud of it. Every one I know wears them, from age one to my 82 year old friend. Most have motorcycle related graphics on them, although, the dark blue one I am presently wearing has nothing on it! T-Shirts and sweat shirts are two of the best gifts given to mankind by God.
 

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,252
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
Some of us still shoot on film! I took this last year on good old Tri-X in a 1971 Nikon F2!

Seattle10DiscoveryPark.jpg

Reports of the death of old-school photography are greatly exaggerated! But it's true that photography-as-we-knew-it has moved out of mainstream consciousness, now that everybody take pictures on their phones... except for ME!
 

dnjan

One Too Many
Messages
1,690
Location
Seattle
I'm assuming you developed and printed it yourself in your own darkroom.

Wonder how many of today's kids even know what a darkroom is?
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
One of the kids from the theatre, up until a couple years ago, had her own darkroom until her source of paper for printing dried up. She learned film developing in high school, so the art is not totally lost. She shot a couple rolls of 120 for a school project using my grandmother's No. 2 Brownie from 1925 and got excellent results.

I still use a Kodak 35, the first American-made 35mm camera, from 1938. Get some pretty good pics with it, too. And as recently as 2011 I was shooting standard 8mm movie film in a Cine-Kodak 20.
 

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,252
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
I'm assuming you developed and printed it yourself in your own darkroom.

Wonder how many of today's kids even know what a darkroom is?

Actually, I developed in my kitchen and scanned the negatives. I've got an old Omega D-3 sitting out in the garage, along with everything else for a print darkroom (my parents were pros for fifty years, so I have most of the equipment from a full-blown photo biz)... but setting up a darkroom here is a project for the future, if ever. Scanning and manipulating the images is so easy - and you still get that classic film emulsion and old lenses look - and more than sufficient for the once- or twice-a-year developing I do these days.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
View attachment 70243

tattoos on women

when this use to be something only seen at a circus side show, now it's the norm , and seen as a form of art and self expression on young men & women, full sleeves is a common trend, something that would be considered abnormal for a lady back in the old days.

It's very common today that I don't give it a second thought.
Although I once saw an elderly woman very dignified in the way she
was dressed and manners with a tattoo on her calf.
I have nothing against what folks decide to mark on their bodies.
But the tattoo stood out and didn't match the way she was dressed.
 
Last edited:
Messages
17,220
Location
New York City
It's very common today that I don't give it a second thought.
Although I once saw an elderly woman very dignified in the way she
was dressed and manners with a tattoo on her calf.
I have nothing against what folks decide to mark on their bodies.
But the tattoo stood out and didn't match the way she was dressed.

I'm with you, I don't give tattoos a thought away from if it works for that particular person - the same way I think about, say, hair color or style of dress. Some tattoos work incredibly well for some people and some don't - like everything else people try style-wise. My only concern would be the permanence - you can change your hair color or clothing a lot easier than removing a tattoo - but again, that's just me.
 
Messages
12,018
Location
East of Los Angeles
...My only concern would be the permanence - you can change your hair color or clothing a lot easier than removing a tattoo...
I've had a number of people ask my advice before getting their first tattoo, and the first thing I tell them is to be 100% certain the design is something they'll want on their body for the rest of their life. Yes, there are procedures that can "remove" tattoos, but they're expensive, they're painful, they don't always remove the tattoo completely, and sometimes the procedure will leave a scar.
 

green papaya

One Too Many
Messages
1,261
Location
California, usa
I've had a number of people ask my advice before getting their first tattoo, and the first thing I tell them is to be 100% certain the design is something they'll want on their body for the rest of their life. Yes, there are procedures that can "remove" tattoos, but they're expensive, they're painful, they don't always remove the tattoo completely, and sometimes the procedure will leave a scar.

While watching the movie "LIFEBOAT" a 1942 Alfred Hitchcock story, I remember a scene when a lady on the boat makes a remark about one of the other passenger's numerous tattoos, she said she could never understand why people would make a billboard of their body with those markings / letters, etc

so even back in 1942 there were people who had the same opinion about tattoos.
 

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