35mm · Film photography · Photography

Stay Frosty!

For the past two years I’ve taken part in the Emulsive.org Secret Santa gift exchange. This year I was extremely fortunate to receive not only six rolls of nice and interesting film, but I also received a copy of my Santa’s book and, best of all, a Kodak Retina IIa camera in lovely condition.

Sadly I was ill over Christmas (just my luck to be sick the entire duration of the two week’s I had away from work!), so I didn’t get a chance to shoot with the camera until this past weekend.  I loaded a roll of Fomapan – badly, it turned out, and I had to re-open the camera back to do it properly, losing a few frames in the process – and set out on Sunday morning as I had a couple of hours before picking my eldest and his girlfriend up to come for lunch at our house.

I decided to shoot in the Attercliffe area of Sheffield, and area formerly dominated by the steel industry that the city made its name on, but now mostly made up of smaller engineering and manufacturing firms with the odd steelworks still dotted here and there). There’s an old derelict cinema building that I wanted to photograph, plus a cemetery, but I then just went for a wander to see what else I could find.

Sometimes it’s just the little things that you come across on your travels that make for the best images, and I think the shot below is definitely my favourite from the roll.

As for the camera, it’s a very nice little machine – a very compact folding 35mm rangefinder dating back to the 50s. A lot of my shots are a little soft, but that might be down to some camera shake in some instances (some of the slower shutter speeds might be a little sketchy side in terms of their accuracy), but enough are sharp to prove that it’s not a failing of the lens. I did find it difficult to see the full frame in the viewfinder due to my wearing spectacles, and I’ve had to straighten one or two shots as a result, but again, nothing serious.

FILM - Stay frosty!

Kodak Retina IIa & Fomapan 400.

Taken on 26 January 2019

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Old but new

I recently acquired a 1950s vintage Zeiss Mess-Ikonta 524/16 folder camera. It’s in good condition, but I had to repair a small hole in the bellows and then, subsequently, re-align the rangefinder patch when I discovered the camera wouldn’t focus to infinity. Also, I’ve noticed that the shutter sticks on speeds less than 1/50th of a second. This isn’t the end of the world though, as I don’t plan on shooting in dark locations or using long exposures, so I can probably live with it. For a sixty-something year old camera, I guess these things should be expected to some degree anyway. Whatever its age, it’s still a new camera to me.

Here’s it is. A few dings, scratches, and signs of age, but still a lovely little machine:

Zeiss Mess-Ikonta 524/16

It’s weighty, but easily pocketable, and although the uncoupled rangefinder setup is slightly more complicated than what I’m used to, it was easy enough to figure out how it all worked. For anyone unfamiliar with this setup, an uncoupled rangefinder has separate focusing for the rangefinder patch and the lens. What you have to do is first focus the camera with the rangefinder, then look at the resulting distance setting on the focus wheel and then manually focus the lens to the same setting.

I took it out at the weekend for a test run with a roll of Fomapan 100, The weather was a little overcast to start with, necessitating wider apertures to be used, but brightened up after a while and allowed me to stop it down to f/11 and smaller.

On scanning the negs, I was a little disappointed to see that the first frames were a little soft. However, once I got to the exposures shot at narrower apertures, I could see the camera really come into its own, with very pleasing, sharp and contrasty photographs.

I’ve not uploaded many of them yet, but will post some of the softer images when I do. In the meantime though, here’s one of the results of the lens being stopped down. This is a couple of buildings in Paradise Square, in Sheffield.

Pretty, pretty good, as Larry David might say, I think.

FILM - Paradise Square

Zeiss Mess-Ikonta 524/16 & Fomapan 100.

Taken on 22 October 2017