I started my interest in photography way back in the days before digital photography was even thought of (since computers weighed tons and needed dedicated environments). I was poor then, and looking back, I think my learning was much reduced by the delayed feedback between taking the shot and seeing the results; often months. These days, we get much more instant feedback with digital stuff like my X10, and I think I'm learning a bit faster as a result. But so much is automated, I now think there's learning to be done going back to more primitive days, using my Pentax ME and my recently acquired Olympus Trip 35, a tenner from Oxfam.
I'm beginning to think the increased anticipation due to delayed gratification (rather than feedback) is one of the hidden extras of film photography. In this case, I wasn't sure my Trip was even working. I put a can of HP5 in it, and went out a couple of afternoons to explore. And of course I still had no clue, other than that the shutter seemed to fire and the film to advance.
So there was real gratification when the negatives and scans came back from Club 35 (not my usual processor, but I discovered Photo Express don't do B/W). And yes, the Trip works! And the results are not too bad.
This was one of the first I took; seems to have worked quite well. This is the only shot with a suspicion of light leak (top left corner; not sure how well it will show up at this low resolution). It might be just flare.
I really liked this bike, but was a bit surprised that it is so hard to read the text on the logo. Of course, it's quite possible that I had the zone focus set wrong. That's part of the problem with delayed feedback!
This was some of the tail-end runners in the Two Castles Run (Warwick Castle to Kenilworth Castle). Like nearly all shots from this set with sky in them, the sky is quite washed out, and I had to pull back on the highlights quite hard (in Aperture 3). Maybe HP5 is just too fast for the Trip on a moderately bright day? Of course, I don't keep good notes of conditions, so this is more of the problem of delayed feedback!
I get the feeling that the Trip really needs a yellow filter for outdoors black and white use. I've seen a couple of UV filters on the interlubes, at or more than I paid for the camera, but I haven't seen any other kind with that filter size (43.5 mm). Any pointers to what to do better?
I'm tempted to try a roll of XP2 that's sitting in the drawer, so that I can use my usual processor. But it's ISO 400 too. Are there any C41 slower BW films?