Bride in a Sidecar
Bridleway BREM 11
Weymouth Harbour (Reflected)
Old Trowbridge
1, Clark's Place
Passengers
Looking West
Freight
Waiting for the 16.23
Travel by Train
COLAS
Packed Perspective
February - Chinon 55mm f/1.4
The Time Machine
GWR
Two Visitors
The Freshford Girl
Dead Leopard in the Station Car Park
Waiting to Meet the 16.23
Pillar Box
Tesco Express
Pimlico, Summer, 1997
A Blonde with a Camera
The Railway Station - Number 10
Rorke's Drift
Window in a Church Like a Negative
Spinach
Rogie Falls
River Avon
Passengers
The Visit
Androids
Spring Flowers at Lacock Abbey
Mary Ann Hooper
Barn Owl
Granary Hedgehog
Five Girls Go Neolithic
Kh 6153 + Masumi
Four Women and a Boy
Trees in the Park
Stripes
Four People on a Bridge
Boxing Day Walk
Two Blondes
Michael Langford
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Undeveloped


Junk in a drawer. Not wanted but too precious to throw away. An exposed roll of APS film is the centrepiece. Are there any facilities where this can even be processed now?
The APS system was introduced in 1996 with participation by Kodak, Fuji, Agfa, and Konica. Other companies got in on the act, such as Boots, the English chemist chain. Many people bought new cameras and many film developers invested in new processing equipment. The directors and shareholders of the companies behind the 'innovation' rubbed their hands with glee.
It was a crap system and lasted until 2011 although anyone with half an eye on the camera market would not have bought into APS for a good many years prior to 2011. APS cost more and gave inferior results to 35mm. Like all the cartridge-based systems before it, it ultimately failed. Caveat emptor.
Nikon D2Xs and Micro-Nikkor 55mm f/3.5 AI lens.
The APS system was introduced in 1996 with participation by Kodak, Fuji, Agfa, and Konica. Other companies got in on the act, such as Boots, the English chemist chain. Many people bought new cameras and many film developers invested in new processing equipment. The directors and shareholders of the companies behind the 'innovation' rubbed their hands with glee.
It was a crap system and lasted until 2011 although anyone with half an eye on the camera market would not have bought into APS for a good many years prior to 2011. APS cost more and gave inferior results to 35mm. Like all the cartridge-based systems before it, it ultimately failed. Caveat emptor.
Nikon D2Xs and Micro-Nikkor 55mm f/3.5 AI lens.
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