Doug Kerr
Well-known member
Periodically arising in this forum is the question, found in various forms, all variations on "Should a picture be able to stand on its own, without any explanation?"
This is a little bit like asking if sexual intimacy has value without accompanying love (and maybe vice-versa).
Every photo has value on its own. There may well be beauty of form or color in an "ultra closeup" photo of the edge of the latch on the battery door of a small camera. But accompanied by a discussion of what is it, it becomes a different work of art, more valuable to some, more boring to others.
This photo:
Jack Lindsay, Manual telephone switchboard, Vancouver, B.C., 1947
is rather nice by itself. It shows two pretty young ladies (a sobering thought is that, if they are still alive, they would today be in their 90s), apparently twins, working at a large manual telephone switchboard. We might marvel that these sisters had been assigned to adjacent positions on this large board, but hey - this is a "publicity" photo. And it was very clover of the photographer to place them at a "bend" in the switchboard (apparently needed by the architecture of the switchboard room) to allow a very rich composition.
On the other hand, we might mention, perhaps in a technical article, that this is an beautiful example of what is called a "partial multiple A board". (I won't explain the significance of that here.) This is manifest from the arrangement of the jacks.
Then I might go even further to say that the picture shows clearly (but see below) the "line busy test", a maneuver in which the operator, holding the plug of a switchboard cord in a downward-pointing attitude, momentarily touches the tip of the plug to the sleeve of a line jack to determine whether that line is busy (the line appears at multiple positions, and there might be a connection to it at another position). (The tilt of the plug is so that it will not inadvertently be inserted prematurely into the jack during the busy test; the use of a downward tilt is so that if the line is found idle, and the operator will then put the plug into the jack, leveling the plug to prepare it for entry into the jack will put slack into the cord so it will not fight that stage of the maneuver.)
But then, I might go on to point out that the operator farthest for us seems at first to be making the busy test on a jack of the trunk multiple (this has circuits going to other central offices), where the "line busy test" is not used (each trunk jack has a lamp that indicates if the trunk is busy). But closer examination shows that she is touching the tip of the plug not to the sleeve of a jack at all, but rather to the adjacent edge of the wooden "stile strip" that separates panels of jacks.
We then note the her sister, nearer us, is making a "line busy test", with fine technique, on an answering jack (to which the line buy test is also not applicable).
Now, would these various layers of discussion "enhance" the photo itself or detract from it? And do they add to what is overall presented by way of this photo, to the reader. Well, I hope so.
In any case, this brief essay gave me an excuse to show a photo of pretty ladies and telephone equipment.
Best regards,
Doug
This is a little bit like asking if sexual intimacy has value without accompanying love (and maybe vice-versa).
Every photo has value on its own. There may well be beauty of form or color in an "ultra closeup" photo of the edge of the latch on the battery door of a small camera. But accompanied by a discussion of what is it, it becomes a different work of art, more valuable to some, more boring to others.
This photo:

Jack Lindsay, Manual telephone switchboard, Vancouver, B.C., 1947
is rather nice by itself. It shows two pretty young ladies (a sobering thought is that, if they are still alive, they would today be in their 90s), apparently twins, working at a large manual telephone switchboard. We might marvel that these sisters had been assigned to adjacent positions on this large board, but hey - this is a "publicity" photo. And it was very clover of the photographer to place them at a "bend" in the switchboard (apparently needed by the architecture of the switchboard room) to allow a very rich composition.
On the other hand, we might mention, perhaps in a technical article, that this is an beautiful example of what is called a "partial multiple A board". (I won't explain the significance of that here.) This is manifest from the arrangement of the jacks.
Then I might go even further to say that the picture shows clearly (but see below) the "line busy test", a maneuver in which the operator, holding the plug of a switchboard cord in a downward-pointing attitude, momentarily touches the tip of the plug to the sleeve of a line jack to determine whether that line is busy (the line appears at multiple positions, and there might be a connection to it at another position). (The tilt of the plug is so that it will not inadvertently be inserted prematurely into the jack during the busy test; the use of a downward tilt is so that if the line is found idle, and the operator will then put the plug into the jack, leveling the plug to prepare it for entry into the jack will put slack into the cord so it will not fight that stage of the maneuver.)
But then, I might go on to point out that the operator farthest for us seems at first to be making the busy test on a jack of the trunk multiple (this has circuits going to other central offices), where the "line busy test" is not used (each trunk jack has a lamp that indicates if the trunk is busy). But closer examination shows that she is touching the tip of the plug not to the sleeve of a jack at all, but rather to the adjacent edge of the wooden "stile strip" that separates panels of jacks.
We then note the her sister, nearer us, is making a "line busy test", with fine technique, on an answering jack (to which the line buy test is also not applicable).
Now, would these various layers of discussion "enhance" the photo itself or detract from it? And do they add to what is overall presented by way of this photo, to the reader. Well, I hope so.
In any case, this brief essay gave me an excuse to show a photo of pretty ladies and telephone equipment.
Best regards,
Doug