35mm · Film photography · Photography

Spending the day playing games instead of going out

I was supposed to be visiting Newark Air Museum today with my dad but, as is often the case, the weather let us down. The forecast yesterday evening stated that it would be cloudy, but with some occasional sunshine in the afternoon. However, when I got up this morning the forecast had changed and was now claiming drizzly rain throughout the day. As a lot of the museum’s exhibits are outside, we decided to postpone the visit to a day with better conditions.

It annoys me a lot that weather forecasts change overnight so often. The whole purpose of a forecast is to allow people to plan activities accordingly and, while I appreciate predicting the weather is an extremely complex task, it is frustrating that in 2024 it sometimes feels that I would be better off with a pine-cone or bit of seaweed or something.

So, instead of looking at a load of old aeroplanes, I spent a lot of the day playing Astro Bot on the PlayStation. Not my initial plan for the day, but a lot of fun nevertheless.

The picture below has nothing to do with aircraft of PlayStations, but I guess it loosely ties into the gaming link.

Basketball court

Canon Sure Shot Z135 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Taken 29 May 2024.

35mm · Film photography · Photography

From atop Mount Srđ (this time with a video!)

Here are another bunch of pictures I took when I climbed Mount Srđ (I actually took the cable-car, but there is a big zig-zag path to the top for those so inclined…).

There’s also another shot of the daredevil woman who climbed the fence at the cable-car station and then sat on the rocks to take in the view.

If you’d like to experience the cable-car descent, I made a video:

From atop Mount Srđ-4
From atop Mount Srđ-3
From atop Mount Srđ-2
From atop Mount Srđ
Old town and harbour
Perched
Cable car ascending

Canon Sure Shot Z135 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Taken 28 May 2024.

35mm · Film photography · Photography

The space between

The pictures I took on our holiday in Dubrovnik seem to have no end. I shot four-and-a-half rolls while there and and I’ve only just started posting images from the second today! I think I’m going to have to start lumping stuff together or I will be posting them for the rest of the year!

Anyway, the next bunch of posts will be images from my Canon Sure Shot Z135. It’s a nice point-and-shoot camera, if a little larger than some of the others I own. It has one of those champagne coloured bodies that make it look less serious than black-bodied cameras, but the lens on it is pretty good, even if a little soft at the corners and with a noticeable vignette at the wide end. Sometimes the vignette can be a little obtrusive (especially where it darkens parts of a sky), but other times it looks quite nice. In this shot the edges of the two buildings – two parts of the hotel complex we stayed in – take the brunt of the vignetting.

In the space between hotels

Canon Sure Shot Z135 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Taken 28 May 2024.

35mm · Film photography · Photography

By the lake on a frosty morning

Rother Valley Country Park lies within walking distance of my home. It can be quite photogenic but familiarity has bred, if not contempt, then a certain boredom towards it’s possibilities. Like most man made lakes and reservoirs (the lake used to be an open cast coal mine) there’s a certain artificial feel to the place. I guess that over time this will lessen and the place will feel more an more part of a natural landscape (although it’s now been over forty years since the park first opened).

Curly tree

Despite my lack of inspiration, it’s still a great place to go if the conditions are good, especially mist or ice, as it gives it a distinct atmosphere and look that isn’t present at other times.

The two shots published here were taken on a frosty morning in late November last year just as the sun was rising, and I stood stepping between feet to keep warm while I waited for the sun to rise and start to cast light on the scenery. It was worth my time though, I think.

The second shot has been cropped. The top of the frame featured the lines of the cable-powered waterski circuit that occupies this end of the lake.

Out on the lake

Canon Sure Shot Z135 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted using Negative Lab Pro.

Taken 25 November 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

A note to self… take care when testing cameras

When testing a new (to me) camera, I should do this somewhere close to home and not, I repeat NOT, drive right out into the Peak District National Park to do so…

This is what I did today, with the intent of shooting a roll or two through my new Yashicamat 124G. I’d already taken a couple of pictures with the camera earlier this week and all had appeared ok, so I went out to the Derwent Dams to finish the roll (and maybe shoot another if things went well).

Everything started out ok although, despite Google Map’s promise of it being “not too busy” the main car park was full when I arrived, necessitating me finding a spot about a half mile away instead and then walking back to where I wanted to be. The walk is pleasant enough though, and part of it can be made beside the reservoir. A little downstream from Derwent Dam I spotted a nice photographic composition looking down towards Ladybower Reservoir. I took the first picture with no issues and then framed up another shot. However, when I pressed the shutter release nothing happened. I was momentarily puzzled – had I not wound the camera on after the last shot? Had I accidentally tripped the shutter? I wound on to the next frame and was able to take the shot successfully.

Slowly working my way up to Derwent Dam and then up the valley towards Howden Dam, I was able to take a number of shots without issue. An then it happened again. By now I was sure that it wasn’t my memory or an accident at fault, and started wondering if there was something set up on the camera that might be causing it. I couldn’t think of anything though and, having shot several hundred photos with my old Yashicamat 124G, didn’t feel that operator error was likely to blame.

I finished up the first roll and then made the decision to load another. I felt that, if I needed to return the camera as faulty, shooting another roll would reinforce the evidence I had of a fault. So I set off up a very steep footpath that led back to where I started, but halfway up the valley side. The first shot from the new roll was fine. The second gave me the same non-firing shutter problem. The third worked ok. I then decided to focus for a while on not having a heart attack during the uphill hike (I need to get back to the gym!). After quite a while I came upon a nice scene – an old and slightly rusty Landrover parked on the trail. Framing everything up I pressed the shutter and… it didn’t fire. What’s more, it would not fire at all now, even advancing the film and re-cocking the shutter several times. The button would depress, but the shutter would not fire.

At this point I decided enough was enough and that the camera would have to be returned. I managed to get a photo of the Landrover using my Olympus XA-3 which I had in my coat pocket. Annoyingly, after this, I found some very attractive woodland scenes that would have suited the Yashicamat perfectly, but which I couldn’t take proper advantage of. I took a couple of shots with the little Olympus, but I suspect the slow shutter speed it gave me will probably result in camera shake on the photos.

I’m hoping that the photos I did manage to take on the first roll will turn out ok, even if there will be two or three blank frames. I’m also going to try to re-wind the other roll in my changing bag. It’s Tri-X so not that cheap, With luck I might be able to use the remainder in another camera.

But this week will see me return the faulty Yashicamat and start my hunt for a replacement.

TLDR: Today’s picture has absolutely nothing to do with the above. The light is nice though, yes? 🙂

Dunston House

Canon Sure Shot Z135 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted using Negative Lab Pro.

Taken 25 November 2023.

35mm · Film photography · Photography

Rooftop

Another of those “it just caught my eye” shots although, to be truthful, pretty much every shot I take is because something just caught my eye.

This is the roof of a cottage in the grounds of the Dukeries estate shot, from all places, next to the restaurant in their garden centre.

It looked nice though, and despite the overcast nature of the weather at the time, it was catching some nice light.

Roofs

Canon Sure Shot Z135 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted using Negative Lab Pro.

Taken 25 November 2023.