All Through a Lens: A Podcast About Film Photography
Arts:Visual Arts
On this week’s show we are laser-focused upon photobooths! Where did they come from and where have they gone? And what were they doing along the way? We’ll also be talking to Breanna Conley Saxon (@saybrebooth on IG) about … photobooths! She’s got a few and we get to talk to her about them! There’s the answering machine and zine reviews too. (We’ve even got some photobooth sound effects provided by Bre!)
After a bit of chitty chattery (Vania’s been surfing, Eric’s been not), we push the button on the answering machine. This episode’s question is:
Do you compose differently for color vs. black & white?
After listening to you folks, we gave our answers too.
Breanna Conley SaxonLET’S CALL BRE!This episode, we gave a call to Breanna Conley Saxon (@saybrebooth on IG). Unlike most of us, she collects photobooths. Her journey has taken her from one coast to the other. From a Alabama thrift store to a Russian in Pennsylvania. And another Russian in California. It’s a weird tale, so hold tight.
We asked her everything we could think of about photobooths – from how she got her first one, how she learned to restore them and keep them running. Simple questions, but it’s quite a story.
Here are a few of her strips:
If you Google, “who invented the photo booth,” Google will tell you that it was Anatol Josepho in 1925. And that’s not exactly wrong. But it’s not exactly right, either. Josepho’s story is the most interesting and the most successful, but he wasn’t the first.
But who can resist the tail of a poor young man fleeing Siberia and attaining the American Dream? We sure can’t, so we’re going to talk about this fellow soon enough. But first we’ll dig into the 1800s to figure out where this whole idea came from.
Anatol Josepho sitting in one of his Photomaton photobooths, late 1920s.We cover the many attempts before Anatol Josepho’s breakthrough and subsequent sale of his Photomaton.
Created with GIMPPHOTOBOOTH BOOKS AND RESOURCESWe recommended three books:
All three are wonderful, and there are definitely more out there.
We also mentioned two websites:
https://photoboothjournal.com/
http://www.photobooth.net/
SURREALIST GALLERYWe also reviewed two zines this episode.
Smash the Skatriachry – You can get it here or here.
Caveland – by Jesse Knifley (@hauntedfilmco on IG)
Old photobooth photo recently picked up by Eric.
We’ve had so much support from our Patrons! Our thanks go out to:
This episode’s first featured patron is Nick Gaylord – @gravity_train on Instagram.
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Be sure to check out our Dev Party episodes.
Music by Last Regiment of Syncopated Drummers
Vania: IG, Flickr, Zines
Eric: IG, Flickr, Zines, ECN-2 Kits
All Through a Lens: IG, Website, Patreon
We’ve got a new logo!A Most Unusual Camera (w/Jess Hobbs and Chandler Flanagan)
The End of the Podcast
Dev Party - Cake vs. Pie
Dev Party - New Color Emulsion; Pretty Big News
Your Snack of Choice - Episode 81
Disappearing into the Bayou; Esther Bubley (w/ Kristie Cornell & Marla Kristicevich) - Episode 80
Dev Party - Stop it With the Vinegar, Okay?
Earth Oddity and the Sunk-Cost Fallacy (with Amy Elizabeth & Liz Potter) - Episode 79
The Ritual of Danger and Style; Virna Haffer (w/ Ed Pavez) - Episode 78
Dev Party - Questioning a Blind Spot
Our First Truly Odd Episode (Also, Godland) - Episode 77
Bless Your Heart – Lee Miller and Man Ray (w/ Kat Swansey) – Episode 76
Dev Party - The Ansel Method Revisited
Dev Party - Abandon All Nope
A Casual Check-In (What’s Up with Kodak’s Price Increase?)
Dev Party - From the Water to the Grave
Dev Party – Wider Than Lux
Photography Changes Everything - Episode 75
Dev Party - Vania, Why Is Lint?
There Were No Flowers: Margrethe Mather (w/ Travis Cannady) - Episode 74
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