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Thanks Charlotte. Bristol would be a great place for a walk-abouts session.
Good work Toni, great to see some images from the meet. I'm hoping mine will be back from the chemist by July.Being a 'cheat' has enabled me to get some images up already (would have done yesterday, but managed an urbex session, and got stuck into processing them instead).
The unusual suspects.
Oxfordwalk-8330 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
Radcliffe Camera.
Oxfordwalk-8389 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
Down by the riverside.
Oxfordwalk-8635 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
Nick.
Oxfordwalk-8641 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
Oxford across Christchurch meadow (I think).
Oxfordwalk-8677 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
Daffs.
Oxfordwalk-8689 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
The footbridge.
Oxfordwalk- by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
High Street.
Oxfordwalk-8698 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
I get that anyway.... one ends up with a lot of images to look through & bin.
I get that anyway.
Great shots, Toni, though it's strange how a digital image makes it look as though I've eaten a small sofa when I'm actually so svelte and nimble.
You know, I've got a feeling these digital camera things might catch on. Still, it wouldn't be the same without the feeling of actually putting a film in a camera, and adding all those things that could potentially go wrong at any step of the way adding to the challenge of pressing the shutter button when you see something suitable.
3 rolls? Blimey, machine gun tactics! Get yourself something like a 1950s Ensign Selfix 820 folding camera and experience the self-discipline that is manual everything, no coupled viewfinder and just 8 shots per roll! Now that does save some time in post processing!
Amazing what film does to colours (and colour balance).
Great shots Andy, I'm sure I can see Lyra Belacqua playing on the rooftops...
I beg your pardon - Partners in construction, if you please.
Was that the yellow filter - nice control of skies there.
When I first saw mention of this meet I thought I might attend, as I still have some outdated film in the fridge and am fairly local to Oxford. I then forgot about it until I read the thread today. As it so happened I was in Oxford on the 1st, but late in the afternoon. Don't think I saw a group with film cameras anywhere. I did comment to a photographer about the nice light who had also been shooting over the fence into the botanical garden, but he was using digital as I was. Two shots from the afternoon in Oxford are on my Flickr. Shame, I could have brought 35mm Canon or Nikon, a Mamiya C220 or my Toyo 45A LF kit. It's all under utilised these days. The last of my chemistry is has probably gone off, although somewhere there are packets of unopened developer powder. Perhaps another time.
He didn't happen to be quite tall, "well built" and have a scruffy beard, did he? Because someone mentioned the light to me around that area and my F100 could easily be mistaken for a digital camera.I did comment to a photographer about the nice light who had also been shooting over the fence into the botanical garden, but he was using digital as I was.
He didn't happen to be quite tall, "well built" and have a scruffy beard, did he? Because someone mentioned the light to me around that area and my F100 could easily be mistaken for a digital camera.
No one else wants to talk to me.You were looking at a reflection and talking to yourself again, Dean!
He didn't happen to be quite tall, "well built" and have a scruffy beard, did he? Because someone mentioned the light to me around that area and my F100 could easily be mistaken for a digital camera.