GP: Where do you see Lomography growing and expanding in the future? An iPhone app?
LC: The sky is the limit. One of our “10 Prophecies of An Analogue Future” states that you should “Expect the Unexpected.” I think that’s always been a part of the spirit of Lomography and I don’t see that ever changing. So you never know what might happen! One thing I know is that Lomography will continue to grow for many years to come. We plan new stores, new cameras that will blow your mind, and new ideas and projects that will keep the community of people around the world engaged and inspired for many years to come. Those are the core activities of Lomography, and there is no limit to what can be done for a long time.
GP: Do you have any good stories from your experience helping to create this world of Lomography?
LC: One of the most interesting moments that’s happened to me was when I got to present some cameras to Radiohead. They’ve been my favorite band for the past 15 years, and on their last tour I decided to ask if they were interested in shooting with some of our cameras, as I had seen on their website that Jonny Greenwood liked to shoot with film and pinhole cameras and I thought he’d be into our products. So I contacted their management and made my offer, and to my delight and surprise I was invited to one of their shows in North Carolina to give the cameras to the band. I arrived with a giant box of cameras, LC-A+’s and Diana F+’s and enough film to shoot an entire tour. I contacted the office, and quickly a road crewmember arrived, hauled off the box, and handed me an envelope with some backstage passes in it for me and my friends. I had also included a letter to the band in the box, thanking them for their music, telling them of my obsession (this was my 20th tim e seeing them play), and letting them know that their music has been the soundtrack to the best moments of my life.
So after the show we headed back to the fence that we were told to meet at if we had passes, and waited. We were marched by security guards to a meet-and-greet area with picnic benches and some cold drinks. I thought to myself, this is nice… a good way to wind down after an incredible show. But then I noticed that people were talking on walkie-talkies and pointing at me.
Next thing I knew, I was being pulled out of the group, and Jonny Greenwood emerged from a room and walked right up to me and shook my hand and started thanking me for the cameras, saying “wow, 20 times?” He seemed so genuinely moved by my letter and by the gesture to give them cameras. Later that evening, I was told by the crew members that I had befriended after that incident that Thom Yorke had taken a camera and said “cool, my first camera!” This was probably one of the coolest moments of my life. I ended up getting tickets and passes to 5 more shows on that tour, and brushed shoulders with the band on many occasions. I’ve never seen any pictures that I know for sure were taken with an LC-A+, but there are a few black and white shots on their website that look like they could be.