Funicular tunnel
May 8th
Uno studio medico
Venice as the tourist sees it
Lake Como from the castello above Varenna
Tidy folds and poker faces
Her right thumb
The death of a horse (or a weasel) is a feast for…
Icy path
Parts of the flag
No laundry, no leaking
I love selfies -- other people's selfies
Impressed by ritual
First station
Procession between stations
Stations of the Cross, Varenna, Good Friday
Wall of Love Gums
Another view of Venice
In the Cinque Terre
Graduation
Coral berry shoot
A ninth of a second at St Peter's Basilica
Reworked somewhat
Learning how not to dry chanterelles
Fakery
The out-of-focus-areas
Pholiota, maybe?
Where I work
Four assistants
End of roll
Gerry by 110
The close-up lens slid in
Autopak does doubles
The Minolta Autopak exposes well but user-failure…
Kit at work
Parking
The train of thought broken by the camera
Skaters
P debriefing
Steps
Dad at 86
Professor and student
Three of my colleagues
Which sparrow have I got?
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At the Vittorio Emanuele II memorial in Rome


If I find time over the next few weeks, I'll post more pictures frommy three-week trip to Northern Italy. I carried my Fujifilm X100 digital camera (from which came this picture) and my Olympus Pen D3 half-frame camera which I loaded with Tri-X film. I've got about 200 frames to develop on the Tri-X; I took over 4500 (!!) in the X100. That's photographic grab-shot overkill, I know. :)
This picture was at the Vittorio Emanuele II memorial in Rome two mornings ago and it may have been the only shot I got where the Italian flag is clearly visible. Although it rained almost every day
in late April and early May, at least wherever we were, the wind was not usually high enough even to unfurl flags.
Being such a stick-in-the-mud film guy, I did not foresee an advantage to shooting digital on a trip like this one: EXIF data. I kept a small pencil&paper notebook and the EXIF date/time stamping helps tell me what my thousands of pictures are. Duhhh. Who'd a-knowed?
This picture was at the Vittorio Emanuele II memorial in Rome two mornings ago and it may have been the only shot I got where the Italian flag is clearly visible. Although it rained almost every day
in late April and early May, at least wherever we were, the wind was not usually high enough even to unfurl flags.
Being such a stick-in-the-mud film guy, I did not foresee an advantage to shooting digital on a trip like this one: EXIF data. I kept a small pencil&paper notebook and the EXIF date/time stamping helps tell me what my thousands of pictures are. Duhhh. Who'd a-knowed?
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The view from atop the building is breath-taking.
I will look for those movies.
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