Thank goodness for modern technology. Soon it will be possible to splice the long-arm genes of an orangutan onto the embryo of a future ULF photographer.
Thank goodness for modern technology. Soon it will be possible to splice the long-arm genes of an orangutan onto the embryo of a future ULF photographer.
I heard today they are cloning monkeys. I am therefore sure people are also cloned.
Get me out of here!
Actually, maybe. I belong to a camera club in the metro Philadelphia area. Currently I'm the only one printing negatives on silver gelatin or as scanned digital prints. There is something amazing about contact prints. However, in our last show, in conjunction with another camera club, much larger inkjet prints dominate the gallery. What to do. Or should I do anything? I've decided that while there are still rolls of silver gelatin paper to buy, I'm making the commitment to "hang" with this digital larger prints. hahaha. Here's a local organization were one can rent time in a digital lab and pay for paper and ink. http://www.philaphotoarts.org/
No difference when it comes to inkjet. Big, Bigger, More Bigger. It's never enough. I like Translate that into, Who cares anymore? I like making beautiful prints, not competing with a billboard company. The galleries must be getting desperate if all they know what to do is crank up the volume of square footage. Pathetic.
"Landscapes exist in the material world yet soar in the realms of the spirit..." Tsung Ping, 5th Century China
Diptychs. One more reason I want a big Speedmat cutter.
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