View Full Version : 60-year-old Leica negatives discovered Three years after my father died, my sister discovered a bunch of World War II negatives in a box, all exposed with my father's screw-mount Leica and three lenses while he was stationed in Italy. I printed all those that were in good condition, scanned some of them, and posted some at the following link. It is so interesting seeing what old Leica lenses could successfully capture in terms of sharpness, definition, and tonality as well as what films from that period could do!
http://flickr.com/photos/21652620@N08/ Dinesh 12-24-2007, 11:10 AM Congratulations on a wonderful find. A truly magical Christmas present for you and your family. I forgot to mention that Flickr requires clicking on each image to enlarge them for viewing; otherwise they are too small to see. David A. Goldfarb 12-24-2007, 11:28 AM Aside from the camera he used, your father had a good eye. Great stuff! copake_ham 12-24-2007, 11:32 AM Since many of the negs were in good shape; I'd be more curious to know which film he used? Fintan 12-24-2007, 11:33 AM Thanks for posting this, its a great story and to be honest a little bit emotional JBrunner 12-24-2007, 11:34 AM Wonderful! Re which films he used, click on each photo. That will not only enlarge them somewhat, it will also display my comments re each one that include the lens used and the film that was used as well. John Simmons 12-24-2007, 12:13 PM Incredible images. Well Done. copake_ham 12-24-2007, 12:25 PM Re which films he used, click on each photo. That will not only enlarge them somewhat, it will also display my comments re each one that include the lens used and the film that was used as well.
Thanks.
Yes, great shots. Some of the pics of the local population etc. really capture a time and place. They remind me of scenes in early-1950's Italian cinemas. Pinholemaster 12-24-2007, 12:25 PM Very cool. Rombo 12-24-2007, 12:30 PM Great photos. Wonderful portrait of Your father. Thank you for sharing these documents! RoBBo 12-24-2007, 01:01 PM Couple of odd ones mixed in?
Don't know what the deal is with those.
But those ones out of Italy are beautiful. msloane 12-24-2007, 01:08 PM Three years after my father died, my sister discovered a bunch of World War II negatives in a box, all exposed with my father's screw-mount Leica and three lenses while he was stationed in Italy. I printed all those that were in good condition, scanned some of them, and posted some at the following link. It is so interesting seeing what old Leica lenses could successfully capture in terms of sharpness, definition, and tonality as well as what films from that period could do!
http://flickr.com/photos/21652620@N08/
Truly awesome. Some great shots. Also a testment that 60 years later you can still print the negatives. Frank R 12-24-2007, 01:37 PM The one of Benito Mussolini may be historically significant. Has a similar picture ever been taken? Jedidiah Smith 12-24-2007, 01:49 PM Some of these are amazing. Makes one wonder if "progress" has really been made in the modern era with regard to imaging. :-)
Thank you for sharing your find.
Sincerely,
Jed I forgot to mention that all the other images on my Flickr pages 2 through 4 (those not labeled 'WW II" and other than the studio image of my father and the park image of my mother holding my father's Leica) are mine, captured with my Leica equipment since I bought M and R bodies and lenses. johnnywalker 12-24-2007, 02:13 PM Beautiful. Your dad had a great eye! What a find. Rob Skeoch 12-24-2007, 02:29 PM Wow, what a great find. Very lucky they were saved.
-rob The box the negatives were found in had no contact sheets, so when I printed each negative it was like opening individual treasure chests! Additionally, my dichroic enlarger performed beautifully in terms of holding back dust and scratches! Also, today's darkroom chemicals printed each neg so easily compared to the chemicals my dad used in the 1950s, when it was hard to get dark blacks. What a joy it was printing all 30+ negatives! pentaxuser 12-24-2007, 03:02 PM Great negs. Shows at least two things: 1. If this is the deterioration(none that I could see) after 60+ years there seems little reason to believe that the next 60 shouldn't see another set of top class printable pictures from them.
2. There isn't much that can't be captured with any slight wide angle to normal prime lens. Like another poster I also wonder about the possilble historical significance of the body of Mussolini. Everyone assumes that there must be several of such negs but are there?
pentaxuser There was no corresponding negative for the Mussolini print; there was only a print in the box. All I could do, therefore, was scan the print. nick mulder 12-24-2007, 03:18 PM top find! I'm with the others on the Mussolini pic - very haunting eddym 12-24-2007, 04:00 PM Absolutely wonderful photos! What a treasure! Frank R 12-24-2007, 04:43 PM A brief search found plenty of dead Mussolini photos, but not this one. |