squirtiesdad
Ginger and Thumbelina
I adopted my oldest dog, Ginger, ten years ago when I first moved to the high desert. She was then five years old—she's now fifteen. In her later years, she has gradually grown blind, and has a bit of “old dog syndrome”—she is easily disoriented, and sometimes walks in tight circles. Nonetheless, she is a contented dog, especially at meal times, and, of all the dogs, is the one who gets along best with the cats. Here, the little kitten Thumbelina, tired after a session playing with the lace on my tennis shoe, finds Ginger to be a warm napping partner.
Camera: Zenit ET (1982-1993, with Pentax Super-Takumar 55mm f/1.8 lens).
Film: 35mm 100 ISO Arista.edu Ultra, developed in Arista Liquid Developer for 6:30 minutes @ 70 degrees, and scanned with an Epson V600 scanner.
Ginger and Thumbelina
I adopted my oldest dog, Ginger, ten years ago when I first moved to the high desert. She was then five years old—she's now fifteen. In her later years, she has gradually grown blind, and has a bit of “old dog syndrome”—she is easily disoriented, and sometimes walks in tight circles. Nonetheless, she is a contented dog, especially at meal times, and, of all the dogs, is the one who gets along best with the cats. Here, the little kitten Thumbelina, tired after a session playing with the lace on my tennis shoe, finds Ginger to be a warm napping partner.
Camera: Zenit ET (1982-1993, with Pentax Super-Takumar 55mm f/1.8 lens).
Film: 35mm 100 ISO Arista.edu Ultra, developed in Arista Liquid Developer for 6:30 minutes @ 70 degrees, and scanned with an Epson V600 scanner.