Visitors
Varenna chapel, Holy Week, 2014
Hops
Found
Self-portrait on transcription disk
Leaf, sidewalk, dark day
Leaf, sidewalk, dark day, redux
My right palm, photocopied moving
Bug
Stymie Font
Old camera. Old film. Old propellers.
Another Instamatic 500 shot
A pair from the Instamatic 500
Another one at the peanuts
Crow with moulting feather
Window view
Going to work
Outside
Drunken tea party
Before apps
So much older then. Younger now. Whew.
At sea
Dancing at sea, 1987
Instamatic 500
Plantain horsetails
Befriend a jay, he'll keep coming for breakfast
Balls
Wasp warming
Out building
Another day six or seven stops down from sunny
Back of a chair
Jay, rain, nuts
Begonia stamens
Caterpillar on the doorframe
Groom comes for the garter
Went to a wedding
Thistledown
Non-scowlery
After the family funeral
After the burial service of my grandniece's great-…
When you die at 95
Why we can't have anything nice
Fledgling chickadee
Shrooms in a pot
"Real" cherries
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
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107 visits
Eyes shut, funny hats


This was Christmas Day 1986 and they are cousins, my niece and nephew.
Nowadays, each of them is a successful thirty-something. And in their
own ways, they both still like to dress up, she because she's an artist,
printer, and clothes designer, and he just for the laughs. I scanned
this negative a few days ago, thirty years on.
The picture was taken on Ilford XP1, the original chromogenic b&w
film. In the mid- and late '80s, I used it a bit but I never liked its
comparatively short tonal range, and its propensity to get scratched.
I probably used my Minolta X370 and a small Vivitar flash here. After
some tonal adjustments in Paint Shop Pro (and spotting!), this picture
isn't too bad, but it was using that simple Vivitar that made me hate
flash pictures.
Nowadays, each of them is a successful thirty-something. And in their
own ways, they both still like to dress up, she because she's an artist,
printer, and clothes designer, and he just for the laughs. I scanned
this negative a few days ago, thirty years on.
The picture was taken on Ilford XP1, the original chromogenic b&w
film. In the mid- and late '80s, I used it a bit but I never liked its
comparatively short tonal range, and its propensity to get scratched.
I probably used my Minolta X370 and a small Vivitar flash here. After
some tonal adjustments in Paint Shop Pro (and spotting!), this picture
isn't too bad, but it was using that simple Vivitar that made me hate
flash pictures.
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