Bumblebee in the astilbe
Bumblebee
"Real" cherries
Shrooms in a pot
Fledgling chickadee
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
Non-scowlery
Thistledown
Went to a wedding
Groom comes for the garter
Caterpillar on the doorframe
Begonia stamens
Jay, rain, nuts
Back of a chair
Another day six or seven stops down from sunny
Out building
Wasp warming
Balls
Befriend a jay, he'll keep coming for breakfast
Plantain horsetails
Raining
More expired film
Newly strung pylon
Roses
Longhorn borer
Last night's moon rising
After eating, a rest
Jay
Our junco
Raining
Two loaded half-frames
Cutting a Christmas tree in 1986
Crackerberry flower
A neighbour's mock orange
More flowers finished
Squat
Stymie Bold, fading
Squeamish about my tea
Some caterpillar
Bluebell
Moon rising over the hill across the Arm last nigh…
Off the bridge
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
92 visits
Four frames of Symes's Bridge


These are four adjacent frames from the roll of Life Brand 100-speed
film which expired in the 1980s and which I shot in the "broken"
half-frame Ricoh Caddy at about ISO 50. I should probably have shot
it at 12 or 25 -- the negatives are *very* thin making for difficult
matters in scanning. But I did some colour-channel & spotting
jiggery-pokery and came up with these scenes of the lane known as
Symes's Bridge (or just Symes Bridge, as most people pronounce it).
The Ricoh Caddy was sold to me very cheaply as it was broken. But once
I added a shutter-release cable, it seemed most often to work. It has
a selenium meter and, based on ISO 50, I generally followed its
instructions for exposures.
film which expired in the 1980s and which I shot in the "broken"
half-frame Ricoh Caddy at about ISO 50. I should probably have shot
it at 12 or 25 -- the negatives are *very* thin making for difficult
matters in scanning. But I did some colour-channel & spotting
jiggery-pokery and came up with these scenes of the lane known as
Symes's Bridge (or just Symes Bridge, as most people pronounce it).
The Ricoh Caddy was sold to me very cheaply as it was broken. But once
I added a shutter-release cable, it seemed most often to work. It has
a selenium meter and, based on ISO 50, I generally followed its
instructions for exposures.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.