Memories – A 3-Shot Story

By Jeffery Luhn

Nine years ago, my wife and I moved from one location in California to another. New job, different climate, and the necessity to leave behind a lot of extra possessions. Much of it was easy to give away or dispose of, but old photos were difficult to part with. I had boxes of mounted prints that I’d displayed, and bigger boxes of prints that would never be hung on walls. I made a painful decision to throw away about 250 mounted prints. At the dump I tossed loaded boxes of prints into the pit where bulldozers scooped them up and put them into crushing machines. The last of eight boxes tore open and scattered the contents. A particularly striking image was left staring at me. It was a portrait of Steve Scher, my housemate from our time as students at Brooks Institute of Photography. It was taken around 1978. Neither one of us liked the haunting image because it was out of character. Steve died many years ago and I have other shots of him taken during that time that trigger happier memories. This was one print I would not miss.

The second shot is also of Steve and was taken the same day. Both were done at the Santa Barbara Mission. While the first one portrays Steve as a mean guy, the second one brings up a better memory.

I was posing Steve when two pretty young women approached him and one asked if he would take her confession. ‘Father Stephen’ said, “Of course, my child. Please follow me.” He led her into the church. They were inside for nearly an hour.

I don’t know what the penalty is for a guy to impersonate a priest, but from what Steve related to me about the encounter, it was a risk worth taking. That incident was the legacy of the Steve I fondly remember.

Technical details of color featured shot: Originally shot on B&W film with a Hasselblad Superwide 38mm Biogon. The negative was used to expose 8×10 sheets of Kodalith film. The Kodaliths were masked in various areas and pin registered on a light box. A sheet of 8×10 Ektachrome was exposed under each Kodalith using a color enlarger and various filtration settings. I don’t have my notes and that’s all I can remember. This was done ten years before Photoshop was released, so manipulations of photos had to be done in physical layers, much like Walt Disney did in the creation of his film Fantasia.

Technical details of portrait: 500CM Hasselblad with 80mm Planar.  Shot of scattered prints: Cell phone camera.

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About The Author

By Jeffery Luhn
I started as 'pro' photographer at 17 when I was hired to photograph 'The Hippie Invasion of Europe' by United Press International in 1969. It was a great assignment, from what I remember! Photography and video production has been my career. Teaching photography has been my sideline from 1980, but is now my main job. I love film. I also publish novels on Amazon.
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Comments

Chuck on Memories – A 3-Shot Story

Comment posted: 02/05/2026

Thanks for the good stories. What a shame to have to part with all those photos.
I have boxes of photos. The earliest good one was made in about 1956 with a Brownie Hawkeye.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 02/05/2026

Chuck, They may all end up in landfill eventually. I kept the ones of friends and family members with plans to deliver them to the subjects. This has not stopped me from making prints!

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David Pauley on Memories – A 3-Shot Story

Comment posted: 02/05/2026

Wow, Jeffrey—what a story! I have many boxes of mediocre prints that I wouldn't mind parting with, but it must be hard to say goodbye to pieces you've grown attached to. The fate of all things sooner or later. I enjoyed reading about Steve and the painstaking effort that went into making the featured image.
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Art Meripol on Memories – A 3-Shot Story

Comment posted: 02/05/2026

We're moving too. I'm tossing a lot of stuff. But I'm very blessed. The university I graduated from asked for all my work to create a special collection in the library for research etc. So I'm having to pack up all that stuff and take it with me for delivery. I'm tickled about it. My wife is thrilled. She said now if I just keel over she'll know what to do with all my crap. There are boxes of prints galore including some 20 24X36" prints that take up a lot of space when packed. Your photos of your late friend Steve are very cool. In the priest shot he looks like a dangerous outlaw in an Eastwood film. BTW-did you ever meet Larry Logan or John Partipilo at Brooks? Old friends of mine.
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