Bernlaws. Or is that bernslaw? bersnlaw? Yeah. Be…
Won't be *much* higher
Mag's Bell Nose
It's like a party on the phone!!
Last night looking NNE
In our back yard this morning after a few degrees…
Dad at 77 in his backyard
Crow, catching some warmth from a chimney.
Waxing crescent moon
August 1988
On the ferry
Dec First and this is what's left in the flower po…
Cooking supper
Scowlery
One-M's cats-in-windows page
Late autumn colour
My parents in 1987
Rose gall
Goldfinch scouting about
A summer's evening in July 1987
Foggy day in Town
The view out the front door tonight
Snowbird kicking up the snow
Trucks' arses
S visiting
Gravestone
Oo oo oo looking out my back door
Some young bracket fungus
My neighbourhood graveyard
Crow getting friendly
Newly minted PhDs, waiting for the moment of being…
Summer 1987
Dad in my office in April 1987
Crow
My parents in June 1987
Dancing at sea, 1987
At sea
So much older then. Younger now. Whew.
Before apps
Drunken tea party
Outside
Going to work
Window view
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Another one at the peanuts
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First shot in the Hongmei HM-1


Ting-ting kindly brought for me, from China, a perfect Hongmei HM-1, a
folding 6x6 or 6x4.5cm camera. I immediately loaded it with some old
XP-2 film I had (expired March 2004!) and I estimated the light for a
rating of 200. It could have stood a couple more stops but it wasn't
bad. Here is the first shot I took with it, the giftor, Dr Ting-ting
herself.
The camera has two red windows, one for 6x4.5 and the other for 6x6.
As long as you remember which negative frame you chose (with
"barndoors" at the film plane) it is easy to move from one picture to
another. The Hongmei HM-1 is a solid camera, with a nice 35mm-style
winding lever, too. I'm looking forward to giving it lots of use.
Ilford 120 film, however, is notorious for having frame numbers that
are nearly illegible through red windows, and I wound the film right
to frame six before I noticed the numbers passing. So the first half
of the film was blank. Then I poorly estimated the light in the room,
so this is the best of the shots, though not bad for a first attempt
with the camera.
I have a roll of somewhat fresher Portra 400 in it now and look
forward to its results.
folding 6x6 or 6x4.5cm camera. I immediately loaded it with some old
XP-2 film I had (expired March 2004!) and I estimated the light for a
rating of 200. It could have stood a couple more stops but it wasn't
bad. Here is the first shot I took with it, the giftor, Dr Ting-ting
herself.
The camera has two red windows, one for 6x4.5 and the other for 6x6.
As long as you remember which negative frame you chose (with
"barndoors" at the film plane) it is easy to move from one picture to
another. The Hongmei HM-1 is a solid camera, with a nice 35mm-style
winding lever, too. I'm looking forward to giving it lots of use.
Ilford 120 film, however, is notorious for having frame numbers that
are nearly illegible through red windows, and I wound the film right
to frame six before I noticed the numbers passing. So the first half
of the film was blank. Then I poorly estimated the light in the room,
so this is the best of the shots, though not bad for a first attempt
with the camera.
I have a roll of somewhat fresher Portra 400 in it now and look
forward to its results.
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