
Watch this little promotional video, then consider a road trip to New York next weekend:

An opportunity to see work of this scope may not occur again in a lifetime. (The fact that the Type 55 film used by St. Ansel for a trio of different-size prints was in fact Kodak’s Panatomic-X in a Polaroid product does not in any way diminish Adams’s achievement.)
The 63-print mosaic is SX-70 prints, spat out from a hand-held camera (as is the Warhol self-portrait at the top; the nine unique prints that make Chuck Close’s self-portrait are each 20×24 inches, as are the Wegman Weimeraners.
UPDATE: Even though this was a court-ordered dispersal of collateral, it comprised only 1% of Polaroid’s collection.
Summer School Fo-Do, one of the best imaginable experiences in huge school, will run from 7:20 to 12:00, June 14-July 1.
Some of you have expressed an interest in picking up work; please e-mail Yours Truly at least one day in advance in order to facilitate matters, and to make sure we’ll even be there. Work pick-up time will be noon on days when it’s feasible.
If you’d like to use the lab on a particular day, likewise get in touch ahead of time to be certain there’s room.
If we’re engrossed in some sort of media presentation, please do not mar our mood by doing anything with the door.
At http://www.360atlas.com/demo.html, a real White Guy shows how he made our planet his own, and is selling a DVD (not unlike Mark Klett’s free, more engaging, site “Third View”- see link at right) of his panoramic pictures made with a Globuscope, designed by the aptly-named Globus brothers (yes, that’s their real name; you realize, of course, that I’m in no position to make fun of names). At http://globuscope.com/ you’ll see that the odds of acquiring a Globuscope are daunting. Fear not, especially if you prefer toys over quality: http://www.lomography.com/magazine/news/2010/06/09/spinner-360?utm_source=www&utm_medium=teaserPhotos&utm_campaign=spinner360
Albumen prints were the dominant photographic process for the latter half of the 19th century. They survive to this day, and they are beautiful.
You can learn how to make your own in the City of Bridges during the weekend before the All-Star break.
Currently, the pendulum appears to be swinging in an unfavorable direction for some types of photographers. Everyone could benefit by conducting themselves with grace and intelligence.