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.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

On Blackpool North Pier

A farewell to Blackpool with the last three shots from this roll.

I’ve been very happy with the look this roll of JCH Streepan has given me. Very fine-grained for a 400 ISO film, and lots of contrast. I’m not sure how it would work in less flattering light, but in these conditions it shone.

North Pier boardwalk
Refreshments
A helter-skelter at the end

Yashicamat 124G & JCH Street Pan 400. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Taken 1 July 2023

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Blackpool Tower

For a considerable amount of time through my life, I believed that Blackpool Tower had been constructed as a prototype for the Eiffel Tower in Paris. I’m not sure where I gained this belief, although I suspect it originated, as so many long-held and unquestioned beliefs do, in the school playground. Some believable kid probably told us in a sage and wise tone about the origins of the Eifel Tower being in a Lancastrian seaside resort. This unremebered child didn’t offer any explanation as to why Gustave Eiffel had decided to come to the windy north west of England to test out his design. Or perhaps we simply believed that he had copied the Blackpool Tower (the reality is that Blackpool Tower was inspired by the Eiffel Tower).

Whatever the case, I never event thought to question any of this knowledge until much later in life whereupon at some point I guess I suddenly had a random realisation that it was all a load of bullshit.

I had similar beliefs about the Tyne Bridge in Newcastle being a prototype for the Sydney Harbour Bridge as well, although, in that case, the builders and designers of the two bridges were the same, and the Tyne Bridge predates it’s larger Sydney version by a few years.

Blackpool Tower

Yashicamat 124G & JCH Street Pan 400. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Taken 1 July 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Mirror Ball revisited

I photographed this artwork (officially titled “They Shoot Horses Don’t They?“)last year during an autumn trip to Blackpool and posted about it here, but the two photos I’m sharing today were from a visit this year, back in July – we went back again because we had a complimentary room.

There are a lot of public artworks around in the UK – I think there may be requirements on developers to install such things when the build new projects, but many of them feel somewhat arbitrary. This one though, is there for its own sake and it’s quite a spectacle up cloese.

Mirrorball

Yashicamat 124G & JCH Street Pan 400. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Glitterball revisited

Yashicamat 124G & Kodak Ektar. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro

Taken 1 July 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Blackpool prom

A couple of weeks back I posted a picture of Blackpool’s “Comedy Carpet”. The Comedy Carpet formed part of an £87 million redevelopment project around Blackpool promenade and seafront.

Among the other new features added are the Giant Spoons, although these seem to be much more commonly referred to as the “Tulips”. These things are huge and must be well in excess of 100 feet tall and are quite the sight to behold, especially when you are stood right beneath them and they are swaying in the wind on their flexible stalks. There’s something slightly unnerving about them, like they’re a part of a Martian tripod from The War of the Worlds, or something.

I cropped the image to a 6×7 format to remove some uninteresting sky.

On the prom

Yashicamat 124G & JCH Street Pan 400. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Taken 1 July 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Brilliance

This metal sculpure names Brilliance resides on Birley Street in Blackpool and was installed as part of the town’s regeneration by light scheme. It takes the theme of “a continuous ribbon spiralling in and out of the ground” and is illuminated at night.

I didn’t see it after dark but it still made a striking enough subject for a photograph in the daylight hours.

Precinct

Yashicamat 124G & JCH Street Pan 400. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Taken 1 July 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Roller coasters and Ferris Wheels

Back to the Blackpool photos for a few days, with a couple of types of thrill rides (although I gues the second could be a bit less thrilling unless you don’t like heights).

Typing the title for this post made me wonder – is the structure in the second photo actually a “Ferris Wheel”, or is it a “Big Wheel”? And is there a difference?

A quick search online brought this interesting page from the National Fairground and Circus Archive, which gives a overview of the history and development of such rides and states that the proper name is Ferris Wheel, even though George Washington Gale Ferris wasn’t the originator of such rides. His biggest claim to fame – at least in terms of building Ferris Wheels – probably came with the construction of the wheel that took his name at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, a construction that stood 264 feet tall and could carry 160 riders. It was intended to be an equal to the Eifel Tower.

The fairground ferris wheels that are commonly seen at travelling funfairs (as well as permanent fairs) are known as Eli Wheels, named after the Eli Bridge Company which manufactured them.

The Big One
Blackpool Central Pier

Yashicamat 124G & JCH Street Pan 400. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°

Taken 1 July 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Monochrome Ektar

The colours on these two Kodak Ektar pictures were very strange and I couldn’t get them to look right no matter what I did in Negative Lab Pro, Lightroom, or Photoshop. So, in the end I decided to convert them to B&W, which has worked quite well, I think.

Tiddly-om-pom-pom
Tower

Yashicamat 124G & Kodak Ektar. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted to black and white in Lightroom.

Taken 1 July 2023.