| PUBLICATION HISTORY The Camera One
Story. Copyright © 2011 by DL
Tolleson. All Rights Reserved.
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THE CAMERA ONE STORY
DL Tolleson
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In whatever I expressed an interest as a child, my
parents cultivated the curiosity by providing the means
to pursue it.
Baseball? The YMCA had a league for which Dad went
all-out and bought me a jim-dandy uniform and baseball
glove (that I still have). The team was the Chargers.
During practice I was a star player (but not so much
during games).
Football? Again, the YMCA had a league and dad bought for
me everything I asked foreven an ultra,
cool-looking, Dallas Cowboy helmet. Whenever dad came out
on the field for pep-talks I apparently responded quite
skillfully by sacking the quarterback and contributing to
touchdowns. But I typically hung back and as dad recalled
years later, When I asked the boy, Why don't
you get in there? he told me, I'm afraid I
might hurt somebody.
Writing was something I started because I wanted to
make-up a hero similar to that of Steve Austin of Cyborg
fame (more familiar to the public as televisions, The
Six Million Dollar Man). Before that first
effortand perhaps contributory to itmy
parents kept me supplied in books throughout my youth. As
mother once explained it, I had the human anatomy
memorized from the encyclopedias (I used to love reading
those things). Mom expressed her concern to the family
doctor, saying that my nose was always in a book and as a
result that nose wasn't playing outside very often. She
said his response was, Dont worry about it.
These kinds of kids usually become doctors or
writers.
Around the age of 13 or so, and on a plane to Las Vegas I
started the aforementioned, Six Million Dollar
Man-like novel (which proved to be at least a
two-decade effort). My parents supplied numerous
typewriters, both manual and electric, as well as all the
forests (typing paper) I could consume. (Home computers
wouldn't be invented for another 20 years or
thereabouts.)
In the meantime, the next big thingin high
schoolwas when an acquaintance showed me the
coolest little machine called an OM-10. It was a
35mm SLR camera made by Olympus. Talk about heaven! It
felt perfect in my hands, provided a totally awesome
visual expereince through the viewfinder and had
intricate controls that affected the outcome of
photograhps in numerious ways. It even smelled good!
Of course my parents bought one for meas an
unexpected and early graduation gift (they later threw in
a vacation to Austin, San Antonio and NASA in
Houstonon which they accompanied me). As far as the
OM-10 was concerned, I later added other models (OM-G and
manual adaptor, OM-1, OM-1n, OM-PC and even an ancient,
non-Olympus 4x5 view camera). And then there were
accessories: more lenses, top mount flashes, a couple of
side-mount flashes, two auto-winders and darkroom
equipment. As time passed I learned to repair the
equipment, taught myself photographic composition (which
was later enhance through college instruction and
complimented with learning darkroom developing.)
Somewhere between my late teens and early 20s, I became a
working photographer and charged for my services.
Near the beginning of all this I went to a frame shop to
have framed a Roseman print. Both the font and singular
sounding name of the frame company struck a chord with
me. The place was named, Gallery One. I thought
to myself, I've got one camera and I'm the only
photographer I personally know: Camera One, would be a
great business name and would look terrific on a card if
like that sign on the framer business building.
And that's how Camera One later came into being.
Throughout the years I have been paid to photograph just
about everything imaginablebe it student pictures
accross the state, weddings, portraits, models, celebrity
events, news, trial evidence, bodies, crime scenes,
property damage and the results of photographic
surveillance. I even garnered a 3rd place
Award of Merit for News Photography through the college
Journalism/Press association (an award for which I
didnt know I had been nominated by the newspaper
Director).
I rarely ever picked up the camera unless I was paid for
it or if it wasn't in the course and scope of
photographic-related employment. And everything was by
referral.
As digital photography began to grow in popularity, my
work tapered off until finally I basically retired from
photography. The digital age of photography was like
comparing battery-powered watches with time pieces having
intricate workings. I felt that skill was no longer
important: Point the camera, push the button and if you
don't like the image, do it again. If you do it again and
dont like it, then clean it up in the computer.
After all, with digital work going straight to the
computer, one doesnt need darkroom skills. Being
pretty good wth computers I felt anyone could do that
sort of image work and the allure of photography was
gone.
But I was only partly right. There is a difference
between being a photographer and someone calling
himself or herself a photographer merely because they
picked-up a camera. It is like being a writer: The
differences are in knowing how to control the outcome
before starting and the result of that effort. Anyone can
take a picture, but a photograph is an experience (which,
by the way, was a promotional slogan I used to use).
Having an idea of how the picture will turn out and
having an eye for the use of light is still important.
Having excellent equipment is still important, too.
As it happens, I have both. While film-based cameras
include a handful of details to adjust, there are two
constants to any given situation: An appropriate lens and
film speed (both of which you can tweak for varying
results). With digital-based cameras its a similar
story. One needs a good lens and a high degree of
megapixels (with ISO basically replacing
ASA thats an adjustable option).
There's more to it, of course, but if you can start with
that you're ahead of the pack. And for me personally, the
beauty of the right digital equipment is that it
interfaces with my baby, the Vivitar 365 zoom
thyristora dinosaur of a flash offering a
normal/wide/zoom head, side-mount positioning with top
mount sensor and all souped-up by the Quantum NiCad
battery for which I spliced together a cord for power. It
probably shouldnt work, but never fails: Through
sensor and zoom flash-head adjustments it can be brute
force blinding or as subtle as twilight.
Lighting is a major factor in any photograph and
controlling that with the camera is what I am all about.
When it comes to digital photography, I aim for restraint
in altering an image once downloaded from the camera.
Its a bit of an odd notion, but I like a photograph
to be the result of what I saw and did at the time I
captured the image and not the result of what I later did
in Photoshop to enhance it. Of course, nearly every image
can benefit from black/white/gray levels improvement,
increased saturation and sharpening.
At any rate, now that Ive retired my film-based
cameras, a Camera One endeavor means not only digital
photography but also visual mediums such as web site
design, canvas-based artwork or whatever else strikes my
fancy after morning coffee.
And that basically, is the Camera One story.
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