Okinawa_Soba is the nom de plume of an American fellow living in Okinawa who presides over a stockpile of 60,000 antique Japanese photographs. To the benefit of photography enthusiasts and nipponophiles everywhere, he has decided to scan and upload a choice selection of the photos tohis flickr photostream. How did one individual happen to come into the ownership of such a magnificient photographic treasury? According to Soba, it was rather simple:
“95 % of the stream came from photography dealers and collectors in several countries — the majority of images found during business travels to NORTH AMERICA. The part that was not found in North America was tediously acquired from several other countries of the world via “snail mail” correspondence, phone calls, and looking at Xerox copies of single images (and whole collections) that were available. Over 30 years of business travel in and out of Japan allowed me to frequent Antique photography and Ephemera Shows, as well as other venues that centered around the buying and selling of vintage photography. As a member of the National Stereoscopic Association, attendance at our Conventions and Trade Shows naturally resulted in the accumulation of old 3-D images of Japan and elsewhere.”
Note: I predict that hand-colouring will emerge as an avant-garde photo trend in 2010. Soon after it will be available as an iPhone app. Or maybe that’s already happened and I missed it.
I was loitering outside of a particularly well-appointed Starbucks tonight, waiting for my wife to use their bathroom, and observing the random assortment of people …
Okinawa Soba
Okinawa_Soba is the nom de plume of an American fellow living in Okinawa who presides over a stockpile of 60,000 antique Japanese photographs. To the benefit of photography enthusiasts and nipponophiles everywhere, he has decided to scan and upload a choice selection of the photos to his flickr photostream. How did one individual happen to come into the ownership of such a magnificient photographic treasury? According to Soba, it was rather simple:
“95 % of the stream came from photography dealers and collectors in several countries — the majority of images found during business travels to NORTH AMERICA. The part that was not found in North America was tediously acquired from several other countries of the world via “snail mail” correspondence, phone calls, and looking at Xerox copies of single images (and whole collections) that were available. Over 30 years of business travel in and out of Japan allowed me to frequent Antique photography and Ephemera Shows, as well as other venues that centered around the buying and selling of vintage photography. As a member of the National Stereoscopic Association, attendance at our Conventions and Trade Shows naturally resulted in the accumulation of old 3-D images of Japan and elsewhere.”
Note: I predict that hand-colouring will emerge as an avant-garde photo trend in 2010. Soon after it will be available as an iPhone app. Or maybe that’s already happened and I missed it.