Print your photos before they become everything you have left

Jun 13, 2018

Missy Mwac

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Print your photos before they become everything you have left

Jun 13, 2018

Missy Mwac

We love it when our readers get in touch with us to share their stories. This article was contributed to DIYP by a member of our community. If you would like to contribute an article, please contact us here.

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She can’t remember things like she used to. It started gradually-she’d forget a name or a birthday or where she parked her car. And then, she found herself forgetting every day things, those things one must remember in order to live life. She would forget to go to the grocery store; she’d forget a conversation that occurred ten minutes earlier; she would forget to eat dinner.

They call it Dementia, and it is, although the word is more of an umbrella term that covers many types of memory loss. And Dementia, well, it’s a tricky thing, because even those systems and techniques created to stir the memory and bring things to mind don’t always work. I mean, a calendar does no good if you can’t remember to look at the calendar each day, right? You forget that you don’t remember.

And THAT is hard.

She now lives in an environment of specialized memory care with others who struggle with the same memory problems. It is warm and welcoming and she has her own apartment, as do others. But remembering where an apartment is located can be difficult. You can write down the number and keep it in your pocket, but then, you must remember that you wrote it down and put it in your pocket. The specialists at the memory care apartments know this; they know the struggles and how difficult in can be when you can’t trust your memory.
For this reason, outside each memory care apartment is a large shadow box, attached to the wall. It has a glass front and can be filled with personal items that assure the residents that the door next to the box is, indeed, theirs.
I walked through the hallways of this memory care facility, pausing to look at many of these “memory boxes.” I was curious to see what these dear folks put into their boxes to remind them of who they are and where they belonged. What were the items that spoke to that place in their mind and heart that still remembered?

As I strolled down the hallways, every memory box I saw contained family photographs.

Allow me to repeat that, ‘cause people, this is important…they were filled with family photographs.

NOT a USB drive.
NOT a link to an online gallery.
NOT a mobile phone.
NOT a tablet or a computer or a hard drive.

They were filled with photographs. Printed pieces of paper from which their family smiled back. Some were filled with a mixture of old and new; a black and white image of a handsome WWII soldier; a faded photo of a bride and groom cutting a cake; a recent image of a family of 5 against an Arizona backdrop.

And in that moment, I wanted to shake every photographer who doesn’t see the value in printing their clients’ photos. I wanted to shake every person who thinks all they need are the digital files, which will be shared on Facebook and then disappear when they really need them. I wanted to shake everyone who cares enough to take a picture but doesn’t care enough to print it.

That’s a lot of shaking. My arms are gonna get tired.  But folks, it’s time we WAKE UP.

Printed photographs are a life-line. They are beacons of light in a world of shadows. They are a living breathing document that says “I AM” and I have a special place in this world.

They are HOME.

If you aren’t printing your photographs, you are losing memories.
Don’t let that happen.

About the Author

Lynn Cartia (AKA Missy Mwac) is a photographer/eater of bacon/drinker of vodka and a guide through the murky waters of professional photography. You can follow her social media links here: FacebookTumblr. This article is also published here and shared with permission.

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3 responses to “Print your photos before they become everything you have left”

  1. Jimmy Harris Avatar
    Jimmy Harris

    Printed photographs are great. Since I primarily work in film, printing is the primary way to view my photographs. Most people don’t get much joy staring at a negative. That being said, don’t rely on a modern printed photo to last forever. Inks fade. Papers disintegrate. Modern digital prints made with your typical inkjet printer and papers won’t last near as long as the old darkroom process photos, like the ones in your example (though there are some options to make them archival, but the average consumer rarely takes advantage of that due to cost considerations).

    Beyond that, fires, tornados, and floods happen. Stuff gets thrown out by accident or lost in moves. Digital files are still a great way to store stuff because they allow you to conveniently store the same files in multiple locations, so even if a tragedy happens at one location, your photos are still safe in another. In the music recording business there’s a saying, “if you don’t have it in two locations, you don’t have it”.

    The argument that file types will become invalid as computer technology changes is irrelevant. Most of the abandoned file formats people complain about came about during the infancy of computer imaging, before standardization. For decades now, new formats are backwards compatible with old ones, and that trend will continue because it’s what consumers demand. In 100 years, people will still be able to open a .jpg, .tif, .bmp, etc. (if nothing else, conversion programs will be around). Raw files may be an exception however, as they aren’t standardized. So I wouldn’t rely on them.

  2. Steve Tracy Snaps Avatar
    Steve Tracy Snaps

    Have been And will continue to do so

  3. Aankhen Avatar
    Aankhen

    What if instead of boxes of photographs these people had access to entire galleries of images cataloging a life that they could now look back on every significant moment of?

    What if the person you wrote this story about could click on a photograph and immediately see the names of those people in it whom they could never have remembered on their own, whether because of dementia or because of time?

    What if those galleries contained not just the one image of an event that someone thought important enough to save in the moment, but a treasure trove of instants telling a story that no one would have thought worth the trouble of printing at the time?

    What if a lifetime of images could fit on an SD card that can’t be blown away by a strong gust or destroyed by water, and could be endlessly copied and shared without any degradation in quality?

    What if prints and digital copies each had distinct and separate values that made both of them precious for different reasons?