Nikon D60 - whether a professional, enthusiast, or holiday photographer, one of the things you plan to do with your digital camera is capture history in the making. It may be personal history your kid's first birthday, a trip to the Grand Canyon, or an image of yourself you can look at 30 years from now and wonder why you ever wore those clothes. But before you start capturing with Nikon D60 the present for the future, you have a more pressing obligation: saving the past for the future.
Age
60
Country
United States
Interests
Somewhere in a closet, attic, garage or worst of all a damp, unventilated basement, there is a shoebox filled with photographs you shot years ago in the ancient, digital Nikon Cameras. Some may be photos shot by your parents, or their parents. Every day that passes carries these Nikon D60 Cameras photos closer to their total destruction. These are chemical photos or, more exactly, the products of various chemical reactions. That shoebox is still a cauldron of chemicals embedded in the surfaces of the negatives and prints taken by Nikon D60. Those chemicals reacting with one another, with the corrosive oxygen and moisture in the air, and heaven knows what other chemicals, from fertilizer to insecticides that may be sharing that cramped storage space.