Thursday, May 21, 2026

Filthy Pictures


Well, that got your attention, didn't it?!

As you can see, though, I'm not talking about those filthy pictures. I'm talking about literally, physically dirty and corrupted slides.

I'm almost finished posting all the scanned slides from my first two batches to Flickr. You can see them here. The album has 181 pictures in it as of early this morning, and I think I have about 20 more to go. Two hundred images is a nice round number, though it's bigger than I'd ideally like a Flickr album to be, so I'll start a new one for future scans.

On Monday I began sorting yet another bag of slides that I bought as part of this haul. It definitely contains work by the same photographers whose images I've already been scanning. Some of the people and locations in the pictures are the same. They're like old friends at this point!

I ran into numerous photos that are pretty badly damaged. They look like they got wet, which caused the emulsion on the slides to degenerate and even grow mold. Maybe they were stored in a damp garage or maybe someone had a flood at home.

I began putting them in the trash pile, but then, as I found more, I noticed how cool they look. I remembered Linda Sue saying that accidents can be fuel for art, and in a way these are accidents -- of storage, rather than photography skill. I especially liked that picture above of Corfe Castle and the Greyhound Inn (which is still in business). It almost looks like a painting.


Here are some more slides that were pretty heavily damaged by dampness. The images are all from the mid-'80s to the early '90s, from what I can tell.



There is an artistry to them, isn't there? Be glad you don't have to touch them, though. Believe me, in person, they are pretty nasty.



I wound up pulling them out of the trash and setting aside these favorites. I don't know if they'll continue degrading or if they're stable now that they've dried out, but I sure don't want any residual mold to spread to the other slides, so I'll store them in a separate plastic baggie. Kind of mesmerizing, aren't they?



Anyway, I got through that whole bag -- probably about 1,200 slides -- and as before, I looked at every image and tossed about 2/3 of them because they were boring, flawed or both. I then had to go through the discards a couple of times to pull out the damaged ones above, because I'd belatedly decided to keep them, and to make sure I hadn't made any sorting mistakes.

I'm now down to a few hundred slides, and I will clean, scan and post the best of those over the next couple of weeks. And then two more bags to go!

62 comments:

  1. I didn't know that was how slides went if they got wet or damp.
    Have fun with the rest of the sorting

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    1. Yes! Keep your slides dry, if you have any! :)

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  2. These are pure art. I love them. When you mentioned the mold, I started thinking about how I wouldn’t want to be the one touching them! I thought the first one WAS a painting.

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    1. Yeah, I don't like having that mold around at all. Hence being sealed in a baggie.

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  3. You are, as per usual, very right about the accidental degradation. It leaves a sense of time passing and memory fading. The groups of people once deluded by ideas of certainty are now no more than corrupted images disappearing. We can never go back.

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    1. Everything is ephemeral, right? We take pictures to remember but many times our pictures don't last beyond our life spans. Successive generations let them deteriorate or throw them out.

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  4. That last one rivals Degas or Monet.

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  5. The last few look like impressionistic paintings.

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    1. Ha! Just as I said to Marty, above. I think it's the colors and imprecision of the images.

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  6. Those ARE very artsy! I especially like the top one, the burro (donkey? ass?), & that last one. Very cool!

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    1. Yeah, the top one and the burro are my favorites too.

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  7. They really look like paintings. Oh dear, those ubiquitous white stackable plastic chairs...! (I actively dislike them, almost as much as I dislike leaf blowers.)

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  8. Spooky A$$ Cool - Something Special About Slides , Even Filthy Slides

    Stay Creative ,
    Cheers

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    1. Kind of fun to retrieve an interesting image from these otherwise demolished bits of photography.

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  9. Once you scan them, then do you throw them out?

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    1. I keep all the slides I scan, and even many that I don't scan. The only ones I throw out are truly terrible pictures like the ones I mentioned a few weeks ago in my "rejects" post.
      https://shadowsteve.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-rejects.html

      (But I kept that baby picture!)

      All of the ones above I will save.

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  10. Those slides are creepy and interesting. I'm glad I didn't handle them -- I'd be gasping for breath and tearing eyes, from the mold. I guess you're not too sensitive to it, or you'd have ditched them. I'm glad you didn't.

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    1. Mold in such tiny quantities doesn't seem to bother me, and the slides are dry now so I don't even think the mold is alive.

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  11. Even the filthy ones have something interesting to see.

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  12. These are in pretty bad shape but I admit, there is still some interest there. I especially like the burro.

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    1. I like the burro (donkey? is that the same thing?) too.

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  13. Before you scrolled down and you said they were "dirty slides" I looked at the top one and thought, "Yeah, but that looks really fascinating and I like it!" I'm glad you kept them (and saw the light!). That one with the donkey is especially wonderful. It's very much like a painting. Who needs waterlogue or AI -- just take a slide and spray it and see what happens!

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    1. Well, I would cringe if anyone did this to slides on purpose, but it's nice to be able to get interesting images from such damaged materials.

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  14. Well, we all rushed over, only to be disappointed with your 'filthy pictures'. Click bait at it's best. :-)

    I love the slide with the goat, she's the only part of the photo that seems to be unscathed.

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    1. Ha! Yes, click bait indeed. The goat is surrounded by a halo!

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  15. Some of those images are better now, than when they were taken. I seldom delete or throw away an image, I never know when it will be the perfect image. Here is a link to a blog with scans of slides dating back to the 1950's (the oldest are in black and white.)
    https://www.blogger.com/blog/posts/8902468695067837457

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  16. Let me correct the link
    https://89-yearsoflove.blogspot.com/

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    1. Thanks for the link! I do love old pictures. Is that your blog too, or just one you follow? I agree the deterioration adds to some of those images above.

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  17. I agree with Jeanie- the donkey (burro?) is terrific.
    My Lord but you have a huge ability to concentrate.

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    1. When I get engrossed in something I do! But you're the same, when you do needlework, for example.

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  18. The castle and inn photo would make a lovely large-framed etching or alternatively a pen and ink drawing.
    Despite the water damage/mold this batch of photos are interesting.

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    1. It would indeed be great inspiration for a drawing!

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  19. These are wonderful! The colors in the last one, sublime. Accidental art makes the world go round.

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    1. Yeah, it's wild how bright those colors are -- with no enhancement from me!

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  20. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJ7TfY2G9-E&t=10s

    I found a video on how to preserve those slides.

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    1. I've tried that alcohol method and I find that alcohol removes the emulsion from the slides -- especially the brown/magenta tones. This may especially be true with damaged emulsion, I'm not sure.

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  21. I imagine you feel the same way as I do about Clara Kuck. After scanning and scrutinizing hundreds of photos, I feel almost a part of the family.

    I used to toy with fixing damaged photographs but over the years, I have gotten to like the damage on them. It helps relay the passage of time and the fragility of life.

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    1. I agree. Sometimes I intentionally buy damaged photos because the damage contributes to the overall image.

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  22. I thought the first one was a painting, and a beautiful one. The photos of people (in my opinion) don't work as well but the scenery and animal ones are very cool.

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    1. Yeah, it can be a little creepy to see human faces so distorted!

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  23. I like the one with the goat. Very artistic distribution of damage.

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  24. Interesting effects. I like the donkey (or is it a goat?)

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    1. Well, there's a donkey in one slide and a goat in another!

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  25. Well I guess I'm in the minority. Knowing how nasty they are takes away the pleasure in them for me. Are you wearing gloves or just washing your hands frequently?

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    1. I just wash my hands afterwards. Even the "clean" slides are pretty gnarly.

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  26. Some of these do look like impressionistic paintings!
    You are doing well with your slides sorting.

    All the best Jan

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  27. Some of these pics are so interesting. The first one is of Corfe Castle, Nr Wareham in Dorset.
    Wendy (Wales)

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    1. I also meant to say that I have a lovely jigsaw of the same scene.
      Wendy (Wales)

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    2. Yes, as I mentioned in the post! I found the location through Google Image Search.

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  28. Those slides are great for keeping you out of trouble- the messed up donkey is awesome! Going now to your link to see what you kept...

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    1. I hope you like my choices! Of course you're not getting to see the discards or the in-between stuff that I save but don't scan.

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  29. Tho' so sad they got damaged, they do look actually quite beautiful, like Altered Art.

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  30. There are some handsome fellows in the first people slide. I love the donkey slide.

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    1. I think that slide was taken in Greece or Turkey, based on some of the others I've found.

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  31. A plastic baggie might sweat and further degrade the slides if it gets too warm, so maybe wrap them in paper towel first.

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    1. There's no moisture in them now -- they're dry as a bone -- so there should be no sweating. I think I will store them apart from the others, though.

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