passatdoc
Well-known member
I recently bought a photo slide scanner for my father, who has >100 slide carousels and no working projector. The goal is to digitalize all his old slide photos so he can enjoy them on his computer. The scanning is fairly tedious, but I find I can scan a carousel of 100 slides in about an hour. So it's a work in progress.
Last night I ran across my (Ektachrome/Kodachrome) photos from my summer in Holland as an exchange student in 1973. I had not seen these photos in about 34 years; I had taken a few rolls of print film while there, and those pictures were accessible, but these slides were in storage for over three decades. Photo quality is so-so, given that they were shot with a horrid Kodak Instamatic 35, but they are well preserved.
Attached is a candid photo of my host mother (smoking while she cooked....) Theodora, getting ready for dinner. I don't remember what she cooked that night but can assure you that there WERE peeled, boiled potatoes cut in halves.
What caught my eye was the point of use gas water heater on the wall.
House built early 1960s with cold water plumbing throughout. A point of use heater in each of two bathrooms, plus the kitchen. The horizontal axis top loading washer was in the garage (not heated, but apparently it never was cold enough to freeze the pipe; I was never there in winter) and most likely there was only a cold water tap with integral washer heater.
Natural gas was/is produced in Holland and was (1973) a plentiful, cheap commodity. Range was gas, as was oven. There was an under-counter fridge and, at that time, no dishwasher, though two years later they remodeled and added a dishwasher.
What was a bit scary were all those cords draped all over the place. The only electric appliance on the counter that I remember was a coffee maker. The toaster and sandwich press (forerunner of today's pannini press) were at the kitchen table, not on the kitchen counters.

Last night I ran across my (Ektachrome/Kodachrome) photos from my summer in Holland as an exchange student in 1973. I had not seen these photos in about 34 years; I had taken a few rolls of print film while there, and those pictures were accessible, but these slides were in storage for over three decades. Photo quality is so-so, given that they were shot with a horrid Kodak Instamatic 35, but they are well preserved.
Attached is a candid photo of my host mother (smoking while she cooked....) Theodora, getting ready for dinner. I don't remember what she cooked that night but can assure you that there WERE peeled, boiled potatoes cut in halves.

House built early 1960s with cold water plumbing throughout. A point of use heater in each of two bathrooms, plus the kitchen. The horizontal axis top loading washer was in the garage (not heated, but apparently it never was cold enough to freeze the pipe; I was never there in winter) and most likely there was only a cold water tap with integral washer heater.
Natural gas was/is produced in Holland and was (1973) a plentiful, cheap commodity. Range was gas, as was oven. There was an under-counter fridge and, at that time, no dishwasher, though two years later they remodeled and added a dishwasher.
What was a bit scary were all those cords draped all over the place. The only electric appliance on the counter that I remember was a coffee maker. The toaster and sandwich press (forerunner of today's pannini press) were at the kitchen table, not on the kitchen counters.
