Show us yer film shots then!

Is that not the cottage that Jimmy Saville used to own as country retreat. After his death and the revelations what he got up to, the cottage was heavily graffitied
 
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That's right lovely, Fraser. I was thinking of writing that Glencoe never fails to deliver, but that cloud up the valley reminded me that sometimes it does, big time!

Thanks Chris - those comments have cheered me up (y) - and that's why we do this hobby!
 
Is that not the cottage that Jimmy Saville used to own as country retreat. After his death and the revelations what he got up to, the cottage was heavily graffitied
No, his cottage was right beside the main road and on a bend.
 
Couple from the Isola. Only got 8 pictures. Expected a few more. Always have trouble working out which numbers to follow on the back of the film.

Agfa Isola first go, lomography 400 by Suzy Richards, on Flickr

Agfa Isola first go, lomography 400 by Suzy Richards, on Flickr

Have given in an ordered a mono pod as I think it would benefit from some extra support...

Got tons back from the Kodak Half frame. 70+!

A few places with Kodak H35N by Suzy Richards, on Flickr

A few places with Kodak H35N by Suzy Richards, on Flickr
 
Couple from the Isola. Only got 8 pictures. Expected a few more. Always have trouble working out which numbers to follow on the back of the film.

Agfa Isola first go, lomography 400 by Suzy Richards, on Flickr

Agfa Isola first go, lomography 400 by Suzy Richards, on Flickr

Have given in an ordered a mono pod as I think it would benefit from some extra support...

Got tons back from the Kodak Half frame. 70+!

A few places with Kodak H35N by Suzy Richards, on Flickr

A few places with Kodak H35N by Suzy Richards, on Flickr
I like monopods, much more flexible than tripods, and give you a lot of stability for not-long-exposure photos. My monopod has a very small removable tripod that you can screw into the bottom, which has proved useful in places that won't let you take a tripod. Monopods are just a bit of a pain to carry, though.

You've got some nice results here.
 
Nice results with the H35N! I still have an unopened H35 (pre-N) to play with... Out of curiosity, which film did you use? I was thinking something like Kodak ColorPlus 200 should be fast enough for daylight shooting on a reasonably sunny UK autumn day. Did the film transport mechanism handle a 36 exp film OK?
 
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Nice results with the H35N! I still have an unopened H35 (pre-N) to play with... Out of curiosity, which film did you use? I was thinking something like Kodak ColorPlus 200 should be fast enough for daylight shooting on a reasonably sunny UK autumn day. Did the film transport mechanism handle a 36 exp film OK?

It was colour plus. Did have some other more underexposed ones in more shady areas so I think a 400 might be a better idea.

Film transport is decent for such a cheap camera. Got 78 exposures on the roll I think, which is mad!
 
It was colour plus. Did have some other more underexposed ones in more shady areas so I think a 400 might be a better idea.

Film transport is decent for such a cheap camera. Got 78 exposures on the roll I think, which is mad!
Thanks for that :)

I might start off with a 24exp roll of Kentmere 400 B&W and develop it at home, see how I get on with that. If it looks good, I'll stick with ISO 400 for colour - though I don't have any at present. I do have some ColorPlus 200 in the freezer... I guess I could ask the lab to push it to 400...
 
I like monopods, much more flexible than tripods, and give you a lot of stability for not-long-exposure photos. My monopod has a very small removable tripod that you can screw into the bottom, which has proved useful in places that won't let you take a tripod. Monopods are just a bit of a pain to carry, though.

Leki made (or still make) a walking pole with a removable head that lets you screw a camera (or possibly small tripod head) on. I have a specially converted walking stick where the handle screws off. Walking sticks are also useful for pulling branches towards you to enable you to get to blackberries that would otherwise involve scratches... We are keeping one in the car at the moment. A walking stick, not a blackberry.
 
I decided to have a go at taking some 'on track' shots with the Hasselblad at VSCC Prescott, for a bit of fun. Especially as I remembered to take the prism finder along with me for a change.


1146_VSCC_PRESCOTT_2025_DELTA100_06 by David M Jones, on Flickr


1145_VSCC_PRESCOTT_2025_DELTA100_06 by David M Jones, on Flickr

Camera // Hasselblad 500CM
Lens // 150mm CF F4
Film // Ilford HP5
Developer // Ilfotec HC (B)
Scanned // Epson V850
Well done, those two are superb and a look really in keeping with the cars , well they are except the tyre wall but that is outside of your control.
 
I decided to have a go at taking some 'on track' shots with the Hasselblad at VSCC Prescott, for a bit of fun. Especially as I remembered to take the prism finder along with me for a change.


1146_VSCC_PRESCOTT_2025_DELTA100_06 by David M Jones, on Flickr


1145_VSCC_PRESCOTT_2025_DELTA100_06 by David M Jones, on Flickr

Camera // Hasselblad 500CM
Lens // 150mm CF F4
Film // Ilford HP5
Developer // Ilfotec HC (B)
Scanned // Epson V850
These are fantastic! A lot of skill involved, too, great job.
 
Just for the sake of the pun, the camera should have been an Xpan :exit:

Well done though.
 
RB67, 50mm, tripod
Incident meter
Kentmere 200 @100 in HC110 Dil B
Crop to 16x9

St Annes Pier


St Annes Pier.jpg
 
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When I visited Halifax a while ago I decided to walk into the town centre to get a coffee. Then this happened as I was walking past. A fire broke out on the first floor of a building, quickly filling the street with smoke. People were still standing close by until the police arrived and started telling them to get back. Shortly afterwards the fire service arrived and doused the blaze. It was quite shocking to see how quickly the fire took hold.

Olympus 35 RC
Kodak Ultramax
Lab developed
Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro


Fire! by fishyfish_arcade, on Flickr


Fire! by fishyfish_arcade, on Flickr
 
Nikon F90X, 20-35 2.8, spot meter
Kentmere 200 at box
Adox HC 110 Dilution B, five and half mins @20.6 finish 21.7

What you Lookin' at

What you Looking at.jpg
 
That's right lovely, Fraser. I was thinking of writing that Glencoe never fails to deliver, but that cloud up the valley reminded me that sometimes it does, big time!
I love Glencoe.
Nice shot btw.
 
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