I continued to sporadically take more than make photographs over the next decade with the venerable box camera as film budget allowed, but the budget too was sporadic.
At this point in my life my big priority was to spend as much time as possible trekking, fishing and primitive camping in the Rocky mountains and foothills of my native Alberta, Canada. I wanted to take photo's for personal record on these outings and the ultralight Kodak Tele-Instamatic (110 film) seemed to fill the bill. It pretended to work at the time but the negatives have faded into detail-less strips of meaninglessness and that is almost more than I can say for the Woolco prints that consumed a teenagers hard come by earnings. That 110 cartridge fiasco did however quicken a desire in my heart to do better, and so I saved up for and purchased an early Canon AE-1, along with a Vivitar 70-210 macro zoom.
On the way home from the Woolco photo department I stopped by my friends house and took a blurry, hand held picture of the moon through the basement window, after which I made the following double exposure, representing to me a group of friends sitting around playing games and listening to music (probably Pink Floyd, or something similar).
Here is another image from that first roll of 35mm Kodak...
AND THEN, for a short while...
... I had the pleasure and privilege of owning a Mamiya 645 with pistol grip and a fabulous Vivitar strobe kit. Alas, due to an unfortunate incident I only had this dream machine for a few short months and then it was gone. While I was getting used to it I did manage to pull off what I consider to be one of my first self-portraits. Here is the portrait, scanned from the original print (notice the Rhinoplasty courtesy of Kodak)...
...and so it was back to using the Canon AE-1. Over the years I have owned 3 AE-1's, a Mamiya 35mm, 2 Konica 35mm's, a manual Minolta 35mm, 2 Minolta Maxxum 7000's and a Canon EOS-630.
In the year 2000 I sold off almost everything I owned, payed off my debts and moved deep into the wilds of northern British Columbia where my wife and I took care of a semi-wilderness guest ranch. After a year or so I bought my first of several Canon digital point-and-shoot cameras before plunging into the world of Nikon Digital-SLR. I currently own a D70, a D50, an FM, an F3HP and a plethora of lens, all Nikon except for my LensBaby 2.0. I dream of one day owning a Nikon D3, but then again, who doesn't?
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