Tall tales from 100 years ago....
Bodwick
Registered Users Posts: 396 Major grins
Tall Tales[font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=+1] have an honored place in American culture.[/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond] From Paul Bunyan and King Kong to the legions of fishermen boasting about "the one that got away," there is something about exaggeration that appeals to our sense of national grandeur. Perhaps it's also our view that in the modern world, anything is possible. Giant hybrid crops? Sure. Rabbits the size of Buicks? Well--maybe.[/font]
[font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=+1]Exactly this formula [/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond]proved the key to oversize wealth and success for a photographer named William H. "Dad" Martin. In 1894, he took over a studio in Ottawa, Kansas. Martin began using trick photography in 1908, producing a series of wildly exaggerated post cards. These were so popular that he sold his studio the next year to concentrate on the post card business. [/font]
[font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=+1]Within three years, Martin's trick photos [/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond]earned him a fortune.[/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=-1][/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond]Demand was so strong that his firm reportedly purchased photographic emulsion by the railroad tank car-full (or was that another tall tale?) Martin sold the business in 1912 and founded the National Sign Company. So far as we know, he never again ventured into the darkroom. But during his brief career as a post card photographer, "Dad" Martin tapped into the national psyche with his own imaginative brand of homespun surrealism.[/font]
An early version of Photoshop I suppose...:rolleyes
Bod.
Main 'American Museum of Photography' site
[font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=+1]Exactly this formula [/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond]proved the key to oversize wealth and success for a photographer named William H. "Dad" Martin. In 1894, he took over a studio in Ottawa, Kansas. Martin began using trick photography in 1908, producing a series of wildly exaggerated post cards. These were so popular that he sold his studio the next year to concentrate on the post card business. [/font]
[font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=+1]Within three years, Martin's trick photos [/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond]earned him a fortune.[/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond][size=-1][/size][/font][font=Nimrod,Palatino,Times Roman,Garamond]Demand was so strong that his firm reportedly purchased photographic emulsion by the railroad tank car-full (or was that another tall tale?) Martin sold the business in 1912 and founded the National Sign Company. So far as we know, he never again ventured into the darkroom. But during his brief career as a post card photographer, "Dad" Martin tapped into the national psyche with his own imaginative brand of homespun surrealism.[/font]
An early version of Photoshop I suppose...:rolleyes
Bod.
Main 'American Museum of Photography' site
"The important thing is to just take the picture with the lens you have when the picture happens."
Jerry Lodriguss - Sports Photographer
Reporters sans frontières
Jerry Lodriguss - Sports Photographer
Reporters sans frontières
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