Raining
Our junco
Jay
After eating, a rest
Last night's moon rising
Longhorn borer
Roses
Newly strung pylon
More expired film
Raining
Four frames of Symes's Bridge
Bumblebee in the astilbe
Bumblebee
"Real" cherries
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Why we can't have anything nice
When you die at 95
After the burial service of my grandniece's great-…
After the family funeral
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Thistledown
Went to a wedding
Cutting a Christmas tree in 1986
Crackerberry flower
A neighbour's mock orange
More flowers finished
Squat
Stymie Bold, fading
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Some caterpillar
Bluebell
Moon rising over the hill across the Arm last nigh…
Off the bridge
My clothesline, useless in the rain
Late 1982
Mourning cloak
Cat, screen
Grainy
Magnolia
Early fast film
On the roof watching a forest fire
Before they mow
I dunno
Spring sign
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84 visits
Two loaded half-frames


I've long been a fan of half-frame cameras. I've had the Konica Eye2
(on the right) for five or six years and it is loaded right now with a
roll of Fuji 1000 film that went out-of-date in 2007.
I received the Ricoh Caddy (on the left) last week, buying it for
under ten dollars (though of course I did pay shipping on top of that. . . )
because the seller said it was broken. Broken it was. But it
turned out its only fault was that the shutter release button was
missing. So I installed a short cable in its place and the camera
seems to work fine. It has a roll of "Lifecolor S-SR 100" in it. The
roll was given to me (with two other rolls) by a young friend whose
grandfather had owned it. The family thought the film from the 1980s
and I suspect that is so.
I'm testing a new Fujifilm X100T right now. It is very similar to my
old X100 which is the only digital camera I have ever liked as much as
a good film camera. I don't anticipate any problems with the X100T.
(on the right) for five or six years and it is loaded right now with a
roll of Fuji 1000 film that went out-of-date in 2007.
I received the Ricoh Caddy (on the left) last week, buying it for
under ten dollars (though of course I did pay shipping on top of that. . . )
because the seller said it was broken. Broken it was. But it
turned out its only fault was that the shutter release button was
missing. So I installed a short cable in its place and the camera
seems to work fine. It has a roll of "Lifecolor S-SR 100" in it. The
roll was given to me (with two other rolls) by a young friend whose
grandfather had owned it. The family thought the film from the 1980s
and I suspect that is so.
I'm testing a new Fujifilm X100T right now. It is very similar to my
old X100 which is the only digital camera I have ever liked as much as
a good film camera. I don't anticipate any problems with the X100T.
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