Picture this

From analog cameras to digital devices, photography has come a long way over the last few decades, easing up things

September 02, 2018 12:21 am | Updated May 26, 2021 01:27 pm IST

Once upon a time not so long ago, there lived a king and queen who took too many pictures. If they wrote it, this is how my story would read. It was just three reels yet was becoming family folklore. We had committed the crime of taking more than a hundred pictures on our week-long honeymoon. “That’s more than 15 snaps a day,” a kinsman solemnly observed.

Thirty-five years later, it is hard to believe that something that was considered such a colossal waste has become just routine. We take bursts of shots just to ensure we get the perfect picture, sans closed eyes and twisted smiles.

Considering the way things were done in the past, it is amazing we still got a fair yield of good pictures. To think that we took a single shot (taking an extra was an unaffordable luxury) and then waited months for the reel to be completed because pictures were taken on special occasions. Perhaps it worked because photography was a very serious and skilful business back then. So not only the photographer but also the subjects were careful too, paying attention, standing ready, looking straight into the lens. And then the idiot-proof digital camera arrived and changed everything. It now allows anyone to take photosby trial and error, at no extra cost, by trial and error.

Before continuing I digress to provide some background to the clueless. A photo, nowadays, is a piece of digital information that can be instantly sent to a friend, uploaded on a website or edited on a computer. Before they were digitalised, cameras were analog devices that captured pictures as patterns of light and dark on silver treated reels of plastic film. The reel was developed using chemicals, thus fixing the latent invisible image as a negative. The negative was printed to get the positive, the photograph as we know it. The reel that had 36 prized rectangular frames came in a cartridge that was snapped into the camera. The top and bottom of the reel had a row of little holes so each section of the film could be wound out of the way after a photo was taken, simultaneously releasing an unexposed frame ready for the next shot.

Sometimes by a stroke of luck the reel had an extra frame or two. So when you turned the lever after the thirty-sixth exposure and it moved on, it was reason to rejoice. But this joy came with a caveat, if you could continue to wind the reel it meant it had not been mounted correctly. This happened to us at the Ajanta and Ellora caves. We wanted to take one last picture of the magnificent entrance when my husband noticed that the reel had finished. He gingerly pulled the lever and we were thrilled that there was an extra. After clicking the picture he happily declared that there seemed to be another and I quickly posed for it. It was only after three ‘free’ clicks that we grew suspicious and checked to find the reel wasn’t mounted. The end result, we don’t have a single picture of our visit.

Nowadays, with most of our pictures stored in virtual albums, the cloud and web I sometimes worry about their fate. If the system develops a glitch, will all our memories be lost, gone in a flash, reduced to cyber dust?

Talking of memories, I often reminisce of a childhood incident when I see the thoughtlessness with which we take pictures today. My class teacher had offered to take a family photograph at my birthday party. Moments later she apologised that she had inadvertently clicked when no one was looking. My father tried to comfort her saying that freezing a candid moment was good too. She sheepishly admitted she hadn’t been looking either. And then both of them gravely agreed it was a ‘dead loss’.

Six months later when we got the reel developed, the envelope contained an off-centre shot of the decorative light over our dining table. A dead loss, indeed, made worse by the additional expenditure of consigning it to paper. Dad duly scolded the studio owner for this lapse and then decided to keep the photo in our album. Just to remind us kids what happens when you don’t pay attention. It is still housed there, a reminder of those simpler times when every picture counted!

dr_manjugupta@icloud.com

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