The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

By Jeffery Luhn

I’m talking about the EXA 1-A, my first ‘grown-up’ camera.

Don’t confuse this model with classic Exacta cameras with leaf or focal plane shutters. The Exa has no real shutter. The mirror flops up and down to expose the film. That’s it. The camera offers B, 30, 60, 125, and 175. A 1/175th of a second? That’s what makes it such a rare collector’s item. Think of the subtle tones one can achieve with 1/175! You can’t get that kind of control with a Leica. My EXA includes a printed tutorial…on the camera!  Just one more reason it’s a classic. I’ll explain the tutorial later.

Do I love the EXA? People talk about their first loves in vastly different ways ranging from a magical experience on a powdered sugar beach in the Caribbean or the back seat of a 1956 Chevrolet BelAir at the drive-in movies. The beach scene is universal, but a drive-in movie may require non-Americans to do a Google search. In any case, the EXA was my ‘first’, so it’s special to me.

I’m sure you want to know how a dopey camera like the EXA 1-A can be both an important wrung on a career ladder, and the source of painful memories. Let’s begin at the front, where this uppity-down ditty started.

I was 14 years old in the eighth grade. My brother was serving in the U.S. Army in Germany. Being the great big brother he’s always been, he sent me a 35mm camera. I’d been a keen camera bug since age 7, but this device took me to a new level. When it arrived, my mother signed me up for a 6-week summer school class in B&W photography at the local high school. It included camera handling lessons, field trips, and (this is important) 2 hours of darkroom time 5 days a week. That was 60 hours in the darkroom!! Loads of kids dropped out, but our instructor, the young and stunning Ms. Victoria, kept me under her spell the entire time.

I was a very enthusiastic pupil and by the end of the class, her and her husband, a journalist, were taking me in tow to shoot pictures. Hundreds of pictures. Rock concerts in Golden Gate Park, anti-war demonstrations on the Berkeley campus, and shots of people doing odd and interesting activities. Ms. Victoria pushed me to “get close enough to touch your subjects. If you can’t smell them, you’re too far away.”

“Yeah,” her husband Phil said. “Don’t hide behind garbage cans and be a photo sniper. That’s crap.”

By that Fall, I was submitting photos to our local paper, the Hayward Daily Review. As soon as I got my driving license at age 16, I went to the Oakland Tribune without an appointment and showed my ‘portfolio’ to the photo editor, Sam Sydney.

“You got moxie, kid,” he said. He sent me out on an unpaid assignment to see what I could do. It was obvious from his dismissive attitude he didn’t expect much.

The assignment was to shoot a dicey area of Oakland slated for redevelopment. Mr. Sydney showed me what photos they had so far, and frankly, they were all boring. They had no close ups of the people inhabiting the place. The wide view documentary photos, to paraphrase the words of Ms. Victoria, had no beating pulse, no drama, and no soul. I left the Tribune office and drove straight to the ‘blighted’ neighborhood with my EXA, 50mm, 135mm telephoto, and loads of Plus X. Around 6 PM I returned to the Tribune building, located the darkroom, processed my film and made several prints. Can you believe there were no security guards asking me what I was doing? No locked doors or elevator codes in the tallest building in Oakland in 1968. Around 9PM that night I put a stack of prints into Mr. Sydney’s in-box and went home.

Mr. Sydney called me at 7am the next morning. My mom thought I’d gotten in trouble at school because the man on the phone was gruff. I didn’t know who ‘the man’ might be.

“Hello?”

“This is Sydney. Where did you get these prints?”

“I made them.”

“When?”

“Last night after I got back from shooting.”

“Kid, we gotta talk. When can you get down here?”

I didn’t tell him I was a sophomore in high school and it was a week day. I just said, “In an hour.”

When I showed up at his office, he took me into a conference room with “WAR ROOM” scrawled on the door. There were people sitting at a long table writing notes, looking at photos, and deciding what news was fit to print. Photos were scattered all over the place and some were tacked up on a cork board. Five were mine. Nobody paid any attention to me.

“Hey, crew, this is Jeffery. He took the shots of people on the board.”

No response, other than a few nods. Mr. Sydney turned to me.

“Kid, go back out there today and shoot some more. We go to press with a teaser at 10 tonight for the early edition tomorrow. The big spread is on Sunday. Get some people other than drunks. Working people. If you do more stuff like this, you got yourself a job. Understand?”

“Yes sir.”

“Not sir, and not Mr. Sidney. Just Syd. Now get some film from that cabinet and shoot this story.”

I shot 15 rolls of film that day. Meter maids, alley cats, garbage collectors, librarians, painters, carpenters, people breaking into cars, hippies smoking pot, a guy shooting up heroin in his car, hookers doing business in the narrow space between buildings, etc, etc, ad nauseum. I stuck my camera into faces and places I would never attempt today.

The shot of the drunk leaning against the wall appeared as a full page in the editorial section of the Sunday edition. The story won some awards. Months later a section of Oakland was flattened to make way for a new city hall and convention center. I did a lot more shooting in Oakland, but I never saw any of my subjects again.

When I look at the well-dressed parking lot attendant and the drunk guy leaning against the wall with his shiny boots, pressed shirt, sport coat, and silver belt buckle, I realize that no street people in Oakland today are dressed that well. The Native American guy drinking wine is well groomed and his jacket looks new. ‘Homeless’ wasn’t even a common term back then. Fifty-four years later the buildings are tall and glistening, but the people have sunk to new lows.

That day, in the Tribune building, I became a working photographer. I managed to stay in high school for another year, but never finished. I did graduate from Brooks Institute of Photography years later, but that’s another story. Let’s get back to the camera stuff.

The EXA wasn’t up for the task of shooting day in and day out, so I got a bag of used Nikon gear and a Rollei TLR for people shots. The EXA was relegated to a lonely existence in a box with my Corgi car collection and other discarded kid items.

Fast forward to 1973. I was 21 and my girlfriend, who will be known as ‘Da’ in this expose’, was 20. She was planning a trip to Hawaii with her girlfriend ‘Cha’, and she wanted to borrow a camera from me. Da was a very pretty ballet dancer, quite bright, but not mechanically inclined. To assist her, I covered my old EXA in incomprehensible step-by-stumble instructions. It’s no wonder that she only a took few photos with it and stashed it back into her suitcase. She relied upon Cha to shoot their vacation photos with a Kodak 110. She returned the EXA to me and I put it into a box where it sat for five decades. The reason I kept this silly camera for so long is that it had a special place in my heart because of who gave it me and who borrowed it from me.

 

While thinking about the weirdest most obscure camera I could cover in an article for 35mmc, the EXA popped into my head. I found it last week. Being a long-time photographer, I checked to see if it had film in it. IT DID! The counter indicated four shots had been taken. I was thrilled! I hadn’t touched the camera since Da had borrowed it.

I rewound the film and processed it. There were three well exposed images! Spoiler alert: heartbreak dead ahead. The shots were of Da in a bikini on a Hawaiian beach with a guy draped under, around, and, well, all over her. I was crushed for reasons that are perfect for a Seinfeld episode:

  • She was obviously enjoying herself.
  • I was tempted to break up with her, but it’s been over 50 years since I’ve seen her, and I don’t know where she lives or what her married name might be.
  • I’m pretty sure the statute of limitations on infidelity has run out.
  • I was not an angel in the ‘be true’ department during our 3-year romance.
  • The guy (very important fact) was a mutual friend of ours and…
  • Still. Know. Him. Yeah. He works on my car!
  • Dear Abbey, (or Annalisa Barbieri for the Brits) California has 650 men on death row. Shall I join them, or find a new mechanic?

I made a couple of prints for the traitorous backstabbing mechanic and demanded he buy me a beer and apologize. He was grateful to get the photos, bought me a six-pack of expensive imported ale, and promised to do my next oil change for free. I guess the affair he had with my girlfriend was a more serious than a quick fling in Honolulu.

I decided to shoot some photos with the EXA before tossing it into a dumpster. What is it like to shoot with such a cheap and primitive camera? Fun! The puffy body looks and feels like a fat metal toad. The button on the top of the camera where the shutter release should be, does… well… nothing from what I can tell. Maybe a broken double exposure button? The actual shutter release is on the left side of the front of the camera. When pressed, the mirror slaps up and down with a squeak and clunk that’s loud enough to wake the dead. A mini guillotine. Very Stephan King-ish. There is something living on the inner surfaces of the glass. It’s some hazy splotchy stuff that makes me short-of-breath just looking at it.

I wasn’t expecting much, but the darn thing still has mojo! It almost screams to be in the hands of a working photographer. Actually, ‘screams’ may be too strong of a word. Grunts, squeaks, and groans are more accurate. The film strains to move forward when cranked, and doesn’t manage to do it fully every time, evidenced by some overlapping frames. The thing is like an old grey fox limping across the parched prairie, sniffing, pawing, wheezing, and never giving up.

What did the photos look like? Not as good as that fateful day in Oakland over fifty-five years ago, but not bad. Not bad at all. I did comparison shots with a sharp 35mm folding camera; my beloved Zeiss Contessa.

The contact sheets show the low contrast and less density of the EXA. Processing details: Ilford FP4 at box speed. Rodinal 1:50 with minimal agitation and a +30% soup time. That’s my favorite 35mm combination, and perfect for the EXA with a top speed of 1/175.

Here’s the door of my former mechanic’s shop taken with the EXA.

Here’s the same shot with a Zeiss Ikon Contessa.

The Contessa is sharper, but it’s a photo finish. Both cameras were on a tripod. I bracketed the shots and worked hard to print them as close as possible. That involved using different contrast filters because the EXA images were pretty flat.

This is a car parked in front of the entrance to a winery. The EXA has some lens flair problems. I could have burned and dodged the print, but that would invalidate the test.

Here’s the same subject with the Zeiss. Better tones and sharpness for sure. In fact, in the 8×10 print you can see the detail in the radiator. It’s hard to beat a Zeiss lens.

Here’s a house on the main street in Murphys California shot with the EXA. Quite acceptable.

Same house with the Zeiss. Better by any measure.

Will I shoot with the EXA 1a again? Absolutely! I’ve got it on my calendar for July of 2074.

Despite the mediocre quality of the EXA photos, it was a great performer in its day…and so was I. I didn’t throw the EXA into the refuse bin. I could not do it. The EXA 1a deserves a full pardon. The camera is innocent, and I owe it a debt of gratitude for three important reasons:

  • The camera was gift from my wonderful brother, who I need to visit more often.
  • The EXA helped to launch my career as a full-time photographer.
  • In a strange turn of events, the EXA made me see that I’m lucky not to have married a girl named Da.

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About The Author

By Jeffery Luhn
I started as 'pro' photographer at 17 when I was hired to photograph 'The Hippie Invasion of Europe' by United Press International in 1969. It was a great assignment, from what I remember! Photography and video production has been my career. Teaching photography has been my sideline from 1980, but is now my main job. I love film. I also publish novels on Amazon.
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Paul Quellin on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Wonderful story Jeffery. Nice sense of relief at the end when the reader learns you kept the camera. I recently tried to sell mine on the big auction web site, as it looked as though a house move was pending. Nobody took the bait... or did the camera somehow cast a spell? I think they are a little addictive somehow. I think there is something reassuring about that cast iron certainty the shutter has fired. I have to say I wondered if mine is pretty good mechanically and cosmetically. The film advance is actually quite a nice action on mine and possibly somehow better than the later Exa 500. I am sure mine, with it's odd waist level finder will be sticking around for quite some time. Thanks
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Thank you Paul! Ah, the waist level finder! That accessory and my EXA telephoto have disappeared into the mists of time.

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Theodore Crispino on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

What a fantastic story and set of images. Maybe things like that still happen today (plucky kid walks in and gets a job) but I doubt it; much like the-dressed drunks, a thing of the past. It also wouldn't have the same punch to just drop off a memory card of photos instead of developing and printing them.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Theo, yes the format has changed. It's almost impossible to get noticed as a new photographer. You'd have to do something really outside the box, like getting embedded with pirates in the Sea of Aden.

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Timothy Hancock on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Great story - love the lesson from your photography teacher Ms Victoria !
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Thanks, Timothy! Ms. Victoria was a great mentor. In my mind's eye, I remember her and her husband Phil as Jane Mansfield and the Big Lebowski. I'd love to meet them again and thank them!

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Jonathan Leavitt on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

That has to be one of the best stories I’ve ever read on this blog! Keep up the good work.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Thank you Jonathan! I'll post some more because I love this photo community!

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Miguel Mendez on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Una gran historia Jeefery y unas hermosas fotos . Me parecio leer el guión de una pelicula ,la pelicula de su vida. Mis respeto y un saledo afectuoso.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

¡Miguel, gracias por tus comentarios! ¡La vida es como una telenovela!

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murray leshner on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Haunted camera. Now you know why it grunts, squeaks & moans.

Good job on the press photos, kid.

Nice story. You lucked out. You don't have a buncha kids that don't look like you (to paraphrase the old Jimmy Witherspoon blues tune).
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Murray, Yes, I lucked out not marrying Da. I did attend her wedding! It was after I went away to school, so all trespasses were forgotten...until the EXA incident!

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Reiner on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

I try to imagine how someone will be able to tell a story like this within 50 years about his 5D, D600 or something else with a lot of sensors and computing inside. What a great article, enjoyed every word of it. It very well shows you were a pro and a storyteller with images. Thanks.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Thanks Reiner! I'm sure there will be stories to tell in 50 years about digital cameras. There's always going to be guys and girls and incriminating photos!

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murray leshner replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

I took 'important' photos more than once that were still in the 35mm cannister because I ripped the film perforation at the beginning and the roll was blank Better luck with 120 film until I wrapped a roll around the BACK of an RB67 film back insert. I still don't know how... I was sure sheet film was going to be my savior...no more film roll ends to mock me. In hindsight, maybe Da never knew Cha photographed her.

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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Hey Murray, thanks for your comment. The RB67 is a beast. I ruined my first roll when I took mine out of storage a couple years ago. I sold the whole system after deciding that it was heavier that I remember. About the fateful Da photos: I'm quite sure Da knew she was being photographed. Her confidence that Cha could get a decent image was probably low, so she forgot about the film. Much different than cell phone photography! No reason to analyze it now. I look at the photos I took of her with fondness.

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Gary Smith replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

I'm pretty sure that my Mamiya 645 is heavier than I thought it would be.

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Neal Wellons on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

This is the best camera story I have read. I was enraptured from the beginning with the camera picture and it just kept getting better.

I was gifted an Exakta VX in 1966 and quickly bought an Exa to go with it. Mine still works too. I don't have any stories like yours, though.

I'm so glad you took the time to put your story here.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Thank you, Neal.

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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Thank you, Neal! It's fun to recall old experiences. This site has a lot of friendly contributors!

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Steviemac on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

That was an excellent article. Very well written and a whole history of fifty years condensed into a few paragraphs. The story of the newspaperman reminded me of those old films. In my minds eye, I see everybody smoking and the editor having one of those odd green visors on. The other thing you made clear is that it's not the camera but the person using it. Coincidently, I just bought an Exa IIB from a junk stall, and am looking forward to trying it out. Doubtless I'll have your experiences in mind when I do so, but I'll avoid the hookers, drunks, pimps and general flotsam and jetsam of humanity. As for the girlfriend, well that's how it goes. Don't go too hard on your buddy, as all's fair in love and war, and good mechanics are hard to find.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

All is far in love and war...and that mechanic is good. I have forgiven him because my Honda needed brakes!

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Gary Smith on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

Possibly one of the earliest cameras with the "Help" file on the camera... :-)
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 12/08/2024

I never thought of that, Gary! What a breakthrough!

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Neil Ó Muirgheasa on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 13/08/2024

"Of all the rolls of film in all the cameras in the world... she walks into mine"

Great story, and great photos.

I'm left hanging, though. I'll leave you with a thought... Is it possible that she worried herself sick about that photo, and in the absence of any reaction from you decided that you had seen it and didn't care about her enough to raise the issue?
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 13/08/2024

No, Neil, I don't think that was in her mind. Perhaps she thought about the photos after she returned the camera and worried about them, but was relieved I never mentioned anything. More likely still, she and Cha decided the camera was too much work to use and just tossed it back into her suitcase. They probably thought the photos weren't any good. I'm so glad I didn't see those shots back then. We had at least 18 months together after her trip to Hawaii. Our breakup happened because I went away to college.

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Eugen Mezei replied:

Comment posted: 13/08/2024

Congratulations! You found the way how to declare the woman as the victim here.

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murray replied:

Comment posted: 13/08/2024

Yep...her loss...

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CHRISTOF RAMPITSCH on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 13/08/2024

Awesome story! Ms. Vicotria taught you well. I love that lens on the Exa is a "Meritar" - their marketing department must have been running out of ideas, and were probably told "it has to end in '-ar' like all the good ones!"
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 13/08/2024

Considering the low cost of the camera and how it performed, it deserves a lens that ends in 'ar.' Pretty clever name, actually. Like the mythical liquid that sharpens fuzzy images: Focusol.

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Louis A Sousa on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 14/08/2024

Wow! What a great read. That camera is a museum piece! Thank you1
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 14/08/2024

Thanks, Louis! I don't think I'll ever throw it away.

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Graham Orbell on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 14/08/2024

A great story Jeffery. I’d say the best I’ve read here for ages. My school photography dark room lessons after hours were free. Best thing I learned at school along with 1 drama class each week. Back in the ‘60s I pestered magazine editors with photos submitted for publication and gradually quite a few were published along with credits. The payments didn’t cover film and travel costs but that didn’t matter, I got to be known and called myself a photographer. This eventually led me into a +50 year career in both still photography and TV filming. I’d advise anyone wanting to work in photography to do the same thing. Don’t bother simply applying for jobs because you’ll be asked to show a portfolio. Get out there and shoot pictures and submit them just as you did. And regarding your lens test. Yes sharp pictures are important but content is more important as you proved.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 14/08/2024

Graham, your career beginnings and mine probably have parallels. Things were easier back then because there were lots of photos needed for print and relatively few shooters with formal skills. But your advice to get out there and shoot, shoot, shoot, to build a portfolio is still the best strategy!

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Alexander Seidler on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 15/08/2024

Thanks for that beautiful story !
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 15/08/2024

Thank you Alex! It's fun to write stuff like that.

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Scott Gitlin on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 18/08/2024

That's a great story and some fine pics. Thanks for sharing.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 18/08/2024

You bet. This is a great platform. I learn good stuff here.

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Peter R on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 18/08/2024

Best story I’ve read on 35mmc!
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 18/08/2024

Thank you Peter for such a nice comment!

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Jarrod Sams on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 19/08/2024

This was such an enjoyable read. I am unsure which is more interesting; the camera or your career. Great images as well!
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 19/08/2024

Thanks, Jarrod!

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Eugen Mezei on The Camera that Launched my Career… and Nearly Devastated me.

Comment posted: 20/08/2024

This is a very good story.
Cheating is in the nature of the woman. You ignore that and get to the next. Backstabbing men are low lifes and you do the same with them. No contact anymore. A sixpack does not erase what was done and especially will not guarantee he will not backstab you again. But what fault did the camera have that you have thrown it away? It was the only one you had no reason to be angry with.
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murray replied:

Comment posted: 20/08/2024

Your loyal camera loves you unquestioningly, like a canine.

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