Found Photo: ET Phone Home

I must confess that I love going to estate sales. And yard sales, and garage sales, and moving sales. And pretty much any kind of “everything-must-go” or going-out-of-business sale — at a home, office, warehouse, or factory!

When visiting such sellouts and selloffs, my focus (photo-pun intended) is on finding cameras and related gear. But what I love most is finding unexpected, unusual, interesting, amusing things. Especially when a found item or object gives me some sense of a person or family; a glimpse, a snapshot, a moment in their life.

As previously mentioned on the Other People’s Photos page, my absolute favorite things to find are photographs and related ephemera. A photo is literally a “glimpse” and actually a “snapshot” of someone’s life. It’s a fixed point in space, a frozen moment in time, and deeply fascinating to me.

Recently, I went to an “estate” sale at the home of a retired professional photographer. I found some cool stuff, including a Cambo 4×5 view camera (without a lens), studio accessories, and lots of random “photographica.” Preparing to purchase, the guy running the sale told me to check the garage, because there was much more photo stuff there. I headed down immediately…

Wow — the rest of the studio was in the garage! An eight-foot, heavy-duty camera stand, pro lights, lighting stands, and boxes of miscellany. Unfortunately, all too big and bulky, or rendered obsolete by the passage of time, for me to consider. So, I headed back upstairs to check out what I already set aside.

Walking through debris scattered on the floor (typical of any estate sale’s final hours), I noticed a face-down photo covered with dust and dirt. I could tell from the back of the photo it was from a Polaroid Spectra camera. After picking it up, dusting it off, and flipping it over, the digital date stamp on the front told me it was shot in a Spectra ProCam, specifically.

The badly-scratched, scuffed Polaroid I found on the floor was a portrait. The subject is a dour-faced, shaved-head (bald), youngish (30’s-40’s) man, sitting at table with a partially eaten bagel on waxed-paper in front of him. At the bottom of the photograph, written with an indelible marker, it reads, “E.T. PHONE HOME“.

If there’s anything I love more than a great found photo, it’s one with a caption, an inscription, or some other form of handwritten note. To me, it’s a view into the world of the photographer and their subject. It’s a mystery to unravel, a clue to consider, a code to decipher. Let the speculation commence!

What’s the story behind this photo and its cryptic inscription?

My best guess: the photographer grabbed his Polaroid ProCam — typically used only by serious or professional shutterbugs — to record a visit by his son, who was annoyed at being photographed mid-bagel. I sense it was not the son’s first time being annoyed at his photographer father…

What do you think is going on in this photograph? Comment below…


What happens when we find undeveloped film? We develop it, of course!

At TEXOLUX, there’s always a piqued-curiosity, vaguely-voyeuristic, thrill-of-discovery moment whenever exposed, undeveloped film is found in an old camera. And, as you can imagine, our discovery is followed by impatient anticipation and speculation when the film is sent out to be developed:

  • Will someone out there know anyone in the images we post from the roll?
  • Will there be one or more interesting views into one or more lives on the roll?
  • Will there be something myopic, historic, epic, simplistic, or even artistic?
  • Will there be at least one or two good photographs, a hole roll of bad ones, or nothing at all on the film?

So, to satisfy your curiosity and ours, we are pleased to share images from any film we find in the vintage cameras we buy/use and sell. When available and relevant, we’ll share information about the camera-owner, the person who most likely exposed the film, and any items of interest which came with the camera…


We hope you enjoyed this blog post! Please visit our online stores and partners at the shop in Barcelona soon…


TEXOLUX | PHOTO

KEY PAGES & LINKS

  • Cameras include: Lomography, Polaroid, Instax, NONS, MiNT & Texolux.
  • Films include: Film for Classics, Kodak, Lomography, Ilford, FLIC & Film Ferrania.
  • Extras include: lenses, flashes, straps, cases, skins, storage & displays.

BUY FROM OUR STORES

Shopify – NEW cameras, lenses, films & accessories.

eBay – VINTAGE cameras, lenses, accessories & OPP.

Barcelona – Collab with Cameras & Films and their brick-and-mortar shop!


TEXOLUX | PHOTO

PAGES & LINKS

  • New Cameras: Lomography, Analogue, Polaroid, Instax, NONS, MiNT & more.
  • New Films: CineStill, Ferrania, Film for Classics, FLIC, FOMA, FujiFilm, Harman, Ilford, Kodak, Lomography, Polaroid, Rollei Agfa, Street Candy & more.
  • Extras: lenses, flashes, straps, cases, skins, storage, displays & more.

OUR STORES

Shopify — NEW cameras, lenses, films & accessories

eBay — VINTAGE cameras, lenses, accessories & OPP

Barcelona — Collab with brick-and-mortar Cameras & Films


One response to “Found Photo: ET Phone Home”

  1. […] Polaroid OPP I found upside down on the floor of an estate sale: […]

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