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Of bears and boat races
from Lost in Light August 10, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime Sadly, this is the final post here on Lost in Light. We extend great thanks to all of our contributors and supporters as we draw this project to a close. The site will remain live and searchable as an archive of all the great home movies and creative projects that have been offered here. With this last film, we present another gem from the great collector of film ephemera, Nolan Pelletier. He includes with this film some amazing slides collected from the same estate sale that offered up this eclectic home movie: This film came from the Estate of this man. He was definitely a hunter. Half the slides I found were of his latest blood covered hunting kills or his hunting buddies. Mixed in with the rest of the slides was this picture. One of these things is not like the other. I highly recommend browsing Nolan s Flickr stream, the owls go, which includes wonderful still images as well as selections of the hours of home movies we transferred from his collection, which make fantastic use of Flickr s video feature. Please also visit our friends in small-gauge filmmaking, OnSuper8 and, of course, Home Movie Day (Oct. 18, 2008!), which also includes a comprehensive list of small-gauge film transfer resources. Adieu!
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When the Proctors Came to Michigan
from Nanoramas July 19, 2008
The parents and the sis came to visit, so we shot a few home movies to commemorate the Proctor takeover of the mitten. Shot in HD on the Canon HV30 around Grand Rapids and Kirk Park. For cross-reference: the husband s family comes to visit; the Lee Family reunion (my mom s side of the gene pool)
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Swimmer
from Nanoramas July 02, 2008
Swimmer Originally uploaded by Jen Pro-V A moment I enjoyed from a recent trip to the spectacular Old Mission Peninsula in Northern Michigan, just northeast of Traverse City. I hadn t originally intended the video to be silent, but my error actually turned out nicely - the silence makes this video feel much more like a moving photograph than a video, and you can imagine the sound for yourself. And here s a (hi-def!) home movie of our adventures at Sleeping Bear Dunes, chomping on cherries, and exploring the maritime history of the region, Valdez-style. View Larger Map I m loving Flickr video and notion of the extended, moving photograph, though, strangely, I find it s an awkward fit on a videoblog. These videos work so nicely when subtly mixed in with still photos on Flickr, and even though videoblogs are often about capturing such ordinary, but poignant, life moments, these Flickr videos feel a little too small for a videoblog. The Flickr embed format also feels out of place on a blog - it s a little visually clunky compared with Blip.tv or Vimeo. But, my time has been devoted to other life explorations, so I haven t been posting much video here lately, and therefore I offer this small voodle for now. More photos and videos of this trip in my photostream.
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Yoda's Brother
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) June 08, 2008
In this film, circa 1980, we see Luke Skywalker going to Dagobah to meet with Yoda. We also find out that Yoda apparently has a brother. One has a snake friend, one doesn't. You also learn that Luke doesn't like Yoda's food, but he PRETENDS he likes it! What a great insight! The "Yoda's brother" film happened because both myself and my brother had Yoda action figures, and both wanted "ours" to be in the film... so we put them both in. Also you get to see me wearing my favorite tights... these were used for everything from Tarzan to a "Strong Man" to monsters, to super-heros. The instructions to my dad were, as always, to keep us off camera. We didn't think you could see our hands "that much" while filming and were always pretty happy at how real our special f/x turned out.
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Across mountains and valleys
from Lost in Light May 09, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 This week, some great shots of huge turtles, a snoozing alligator, Mt. Rushmore, and vistas of the Grand Canyon. All from our contributor Ashima, who adds this: My mama had a hard time remembering the year, but she thinks it is 1977. I do clearly remembering waking up that alligator in my little brown suit. I didn t want to get mud on it! We took this trip from Chicago to California and these were some stops along the way. I think the trading post at the end of the video is the Hubbell Trading Post, a national historic site. Honestly, I have no idea where the turtle and alligator were located. I asked my mama and she cannot remember either. BUT, doesn t that guy look like Steve Irwin only skinnier? I doubt it was him The Hubbell Trading Post is the oldest operating trading post in the Navajo Nation of the U.S., located in Northeastern Arizona. For high-resolution footage of this film and more, click the MPEG-2 link above to access the Internet Archive.
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Images of India
from Lost in Light May 02, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 More from Ashima s collection of home movies this week. Here, we feature a visit to India in 1969, with lush, detailed images of the spectacular architecture there. Ashima offers a little more detail on the locations: This must have been 1969 and taken at two places, Red Fort in Delhi and Jama Masjid. The snake charmer was at Red Fort. This must have been just before we left for Europe. The Red Fort is a tremendous fortress palace and Jama Masjid a historic mosque, both constructed by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in the mid-1600s. See a satellite view of the Red Fort here and Jama Masjid here. Click the MPEG-2 link above for high-resolution footage of this gorgeous film and more at the Internet Archive.
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Marking the first year
from Lost in Light April 25, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (soon) In this film full of delicious looking food, our contributor Ashima turns one year old. She tells us more: My 1st year birthday party (1969) in Albany Village which is student housing in Berkeley, CA. My father was working on his PhD at UC-Berkeley (Industrial Engineering). This was a typical Indian gathering, outside and with lots of food. Mama made a lot of the Indian food, but she got the cake and sandwiches catered. There were probably 30+ people in attendance. There is a man holding me whose name is Russ. He was friends with my Leo Uncle. Leo and Ruth were two individuals who became like my Papa and Mama s second parents in the US. We always had Easter and Thanksgiving with them when we lived in CA. Anyway, Mama is wearing a sari that Papa gave her as a wedding gift. She still owns it! The two older girls are Raman (who lives in Detroit now) and Sunaina (not sure where she is now). Then, the other two babies I m sitting with her friends I used to play with a lot. Mama couldn t remember their names. The blue outfit I am wearing was sent to my Mama by her Mama. Ruth Auntie and my mama found the tights at a dime store called Kresge. Interestingly, the Kresge dime store was the forerunner to the modern Kmart. Here are some fantastic recordings of the in-store background music to truly put you back in the 1960s Kresge experience. Read more about the history of the Kresge and Kmart stores here. And the Kresge Foundation website is here. Click MPEG-2 above for a high resolution version of this film and more from Ashima at the Internet Archive.
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Fairyland
from Lost in Light April 18, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (soon) This week, a charming tour of one of my favorite childhood haunts in the Bay Area, Children s Fairyland. Located near Lake Merritt in Oakland, California, this theme park based on children s literature is still very much alive, and not much changed from what we see in this film, submitted by Ashima here in Grand Rapids. Ashima has a few words to add: Must be 1968 and my Papa is holding me in the beginning. Papa was always wanting to use his camera to take pictures and video of me. Mama said that they had planned to send them to India, but never did. Here s another great set of photos from this unique place. A fun YouTube home movie that takes us down the rabbit hole in the Alice in Wonderland section. Here s a current bird s eye view of the park, and an aerial view from Google maps. Click the MPEG-2 link above for a high resolution version of this home movie on the Internet Archive.
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Doting Mother
from Lost in Light April 11, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (soon) This week, a beautiful and tender movie of a mother clearly in love with her new baby. Submitted by Ashima here in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the film features footage from California s Bay Area in the late 1960s. A bit more detail from Ashima, who was the baby in the film: Circa 1968 at Albany Village. Outside the apartment, the red car is what my parents used to drive. The red dress I am wearing my mama made. She used to make a lot of the clothes as long as the fabric cost less than $.25. Next, outside on the lawn on the University campus. The pram was used for both Ashima and Shailesh [Ashima s brother, born later]. Sari was silk given by Mama s mama when she got married. Building is near or around Berkeley campus. Hippie is some guy playing the guitar on Berkeley s campus. My mama said that she didn t think of him as a hippie, he was just a nice person playing pretty music. How sweet is that?! I love that shot! My mom in a sari and this dude playing guitar! Cultures come together peacefully! Albany Village is now known as UC Village, a student housing complex just outside of the University of California at Berkeley campus. Ashima s father was was then working on his Ph.D in Industrial Engineering. Click the MPEG-2 link above for high-resolution footage of this lovely film from the Internet Archive.
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Chicago Wedding, 1948
from Lost in Light April 04, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (soon) Here in West Michigan, my student, Evan, brought me a box of wonderful footage of his family s home movies, a number of which we ll be featuring here. The first is the wedding of grandparents in the late 1940s, and includes images of Evan s great-grandparents - one of those amazing events to have preserved on film. Evan explains: It s the wedding of Ken and Jan Rattenbury (maiden name - Baxter) The date is actually Sept. 18th, 1948 at St. Benedict s in Chicago. Behind the camera is Gardner Kreiser, the bride s 2nd cousin. Evan also shared the emails his grandparents sent with more details about the wedding (I love emails from grandparents): Dear Evan, The pictures are Mine and your Grandmother s Wedding on Sept 18, 1948. The pictures were made by Jan s Uncle Gardner. The pictures are mostly the family. The two old ladies are your great-grandmothers. The lady with the pink flowered hat is my mother (Alice Rattenbury), and the car was our good friend Eddie Roger s who took us away. Hope that is enough. Love grampa Hi Evan: It s your gramma. I just saw the movies and they are super. Haven t watched any of them since your folks first sent the VCR s. Terri Spies was my maid of honor, Uncle Bruce (Rattenbury) was Best Man (lady in red and the guy next to her in the second shot of her), my grandmother and Grampa s grandmother were the oldest people in the movie. So many of our friends and relatives are gone!!! My dad (John Baxter) was the one with the sexy mustache, The church was St. Benedict s down on the corner where we lived in Chicago. Click the MPEG-2 link above for a high-resolution version of this film, provided by the Internet Archive.
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Oradour-Sur-Glane
from Vimeo / Recent Public Videos March 28, 2008
Oradour-Sur-Glane from Lost in Light on Vimeo. For more information and links, see http://lostinlight.org. This week, we present an orphan film, purchased some time ago on eBay by Tony P. in France. The film features a visit to the small French town of Oradour-Sur-Glane, the site of the infamous massacre of 642 people - almost the entire population - by Germans during World War II. The remnants of destruction, seen throughout this film, have remain untouched as a memorial of this catastrophic event. The date of this film is unknown, but judging from the quality of the film and reel I would say it was fairly recently shot - 1980s or 1990s. The story behind the images is too vast and complex to present here; instead, click here, here, and here for accounts that better explain and document the historical significance of this event. See also this photo slideshow with accompanying map for a better sense of the geography of these locations. Cast: Lost in Light
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Oradour-Sur-Glane
from Lost in Light March 28, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (soon) This week, we present an orphan film, purchased some time ago on eBay by Tony P. in France. The film features a visit to the small French town of Oradour-Sur-Glane, the site of the infamous massacre of 642 people - almost the entire population - by Germans during World War II. The remnants of destruction, seen throughout this film, have remain untouched as a memorial of this catastrophic event. The date of this film is unknown, but judging from the quality of the film and reel I would say it was fairly recently shot - 1980s or 1990s. The story behind the images is too vast and complex to present here; instead, click here, here, and here for accounts that better explain and document the historical significance of this event. See also this photo slideshow with accompanying map for a better sense of the geography of these locations. View Larger Map Thanks to Tony P. for sending this all the way from France to us in Michigan for inclusion on this site. Click the MPEG-2 link above for a high-resolution version of the film, downloadable via the Internet Archive.
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Lost in Light
from Lost in Light March 14, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 I love this week s film from the 1950s. A simple haircut produces tremendous drama. Our submitter, Susan S. of Louisiana, USA, sums it up best: My Dad, Carter, is giving my brother, Stephen, his first haircut and I am sure that Mom is taking the pictures. Dad was always the one to give haircuts, bathe us, trim nails etc. I think he was way braver than mother would have been with those scissors! My brother never did like haircuts but Dad continued to be his barber until the 60 s when he let his hair grow! I think it s funny at the beginning of the film, that Dad thought Stephen was going to just sit in that chair with the towel around his neck and be cooperative! Click the MPEG-2 link above for a high-resolution version of this film, available for download and re-use under a Creative Commons copyright license through the Internet Archive.
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Lost in Light
from Lost in Light March 07, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (coming soon) This week, a charming film from Susan S. from Galveston, Texas, in the 1950s. It s all about the reactions to those boots! From Susan: I remember having those red boots! Funny how you remember certain things! Also, I can tell from the wallpaper and a pink rose vase on the table behind me, that we are my grandparents house, Henry and Lillian Schultz, on 49th street in Galveston, Texas. Must have been my 4th birthday so it s 1953. That is my 1st cousin, Zeb, in the bow tie, and my brother , Stephen, in the high chair. Also in the film is my very handsome Dad Carter Shirey, and my grandparents, paternal grandmother, aunt and uncle. Mother, Betty Shirey, is sitting next to me and helping me unwrap presents. I can t think of who might be taking the pictures since the whole family is in the film! My grandparents lived in that house until I was 16 - it was built on stilts like most of the houses in Galveston after the storm of 1900. A reminder that we re now showing films without sound to more accurately present them in their original form. High-quality raw footage of this film and more is downloadable from the Internet Archive. Click the MPEG-2 link above.
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Lost in Light
from Lost in Light February 29, 2008
click image to view in Flash | Quicktime | MPEG-2 (available soon) Our short hiatus ended up being a bit longer than anticipated, but Lost in Light is back in action. In this second year of the project, we are striving to present films in their original form as much possible, so we ve decided to present silent films as silent, without our editorial addition of music, and with minimal editing on our part. We return with this wonderful film from the early 1950s U.S. Gulf Coast. Susan S., one of the children in the film, provides this background: My parents were living around the Gulf Coast area-Galveston, Texas City, Sabine. I think that the sawfish is on the beach in Galveston. I remember my Dad telling us about the things that the fishing boats would drag up that was caught in their nets. Anytime it was something big , a crowd would be gathered around taking pictures. Once it was a huge whale that had beached itself. I am the topless brunette so it s about 1951. Mother is the beauty getting into the car. About New Orleans, Mother doesn t remember but I think there are some things in the film that you can t see in New Orleans anymore - will need to do a little research! If you have observations about parts of New Orleans depicted in this film that don t exist anymore, please leave them in the comments. Certainly the city has changed overwhelmingly since this film was taken - makes me appreciate films like this all the more. Interestingly, sawfish are now an endangered species and international trade is banned. As always, a complete, high-resolution version of this film is available for download at the Internet Archive. Click MPEG-2 above for the link.
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Blue Christmas
from Vimeo / mmeiser's contacts' videos January 12, 2008
Blue Christmas from Aaron Valdez on Vimeo. A little compilation of old Christmas home movies for http://lostinlight.org Music by Jack, Tanner, and Anja http://clevernettle.com Cast: Aaron Valdez
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Jumpers
from Vimeo / mmeiser's subscription videos January 12, 2008
Jumpers from Amir on Vimeo. Most of us at CollegeHumor have a very childlike enthusiasm about life and jumping and chairs or whatever. (Shot on November 8, 2007.) Cast: Amir, Patrick Cassels, Amir Cohen and Jake Hurwitz
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Davey Dance Blog -38- ROCKEFELLER CENTER - Mariah Carey - "All I Want for Xmas is You"
from Vimeo / mmeiser's subscription videos January 12, 2008
Davey Dance Blog -38- ROCKEFELLER CENTER - Mariah Carey - "All I Want for Xmas is You" from Pheasant Plucker on Vimeo. Davey Dance-BLOG. A project started while traveling Europe during Spring 2007. Armed only with an ipod and a Canon PowerShot, Davey picks a location and a pop song. Then Davey records an improvised dance. *This is the closest we ever came to getting arrested. A security guard in the back tried to stop us from dancing. Also, this time we shot with an HVX instead of the PowerShot to try out vimeo's HDness Cast: Pheasant Plucker, Amir, Amir Cohen, Ted Roden, Blake Whitman, Jake Oliver and Chris 'The Falcon' Han
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Lost in Light
from Lost in Light December 22, 2007
click above for flash | Quicktime | file directory Things I love about Old Christmas : Ashtrays, metal toys, stockings for Porky, miniature bowling alleys, blinding light, ice in tumblers, gravy boats, modeling for moms, Cookie Monster slippers, babies trapped in rolling apparatus, aunts, AM radios, weapons, little bakers, mesmerizing toy packaging, cat tails, typewriters, ez bake ovens, kids buried in wrapping paper, 6-packs, 60 lb. radio controllers, floral house coats, moms who like everything, and easy to please grandpas. Music: Blue Christmas by Jack, Tanner, and Anja. More songs here. Check out Anja s website which is chock full of her beautiful original artwork, vintage clothes, found photos, and fun blogs.
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