My son played quietly in his room this morning and let me sleep in an extra glorious hour. An hour! It makes a huuuge difference in my mood.
Twitter Update: I love when people randomly “like” a baby photo of…
I love when people randomly “like” a baby photo of Connor on Instagram from four years ago! #flashbackfriday instagram.com/p/myuH4/
Twitter Update: On a mission to create Spotify playlists out of th…
On a mission to create Spotify playlists out of the songs I’ve discovered and rediscovered with Shazam. I have almost 3 hrs of music so far.
Twitter Update: Got some great pics of downtown Toledo (and a hips…
Got some great pics of downtown Toledo (and a hipstery mint green light leak) with the Imperial Flash Mark XII! blog.dianaschnuth.com/?p=30883
Imperial Flash Mark XII Test Roll
When I first bought this camera from the antique mall some eight years ago, I didn’t own any other 620 cameras — and even if I’d had an extra couple of 620 spools handy, it hadn’t even occurred to me to try respooling 120 film onto a 620 spool. I managed to run two rolls of 35mm through the camera to try some sprocket photography, but couldn’t quite get the film plane flat. It wasn’t until recently that I realized I now have enough extra 620 spools to run a real test roll through this cute little camera.
It’s a box camera: there are no settings. Not only that, but my particular camera is missing the rear element on the viewfinder, so the image is teeny tiny and only really usable as a guesstimate unless I squint reeeeally hard.
Other fun features of this camera that I discovered upon seeing the test roll: First, there’s something stuck in the camera (I assume) that’s causing a black triangle shape to appear in the bottom right of almost all the images. (Edit: I’d applied some gaffer’s tape inside the camera to eliminate some emulsion scratches on my sprocket photography rolls, and that was coming off. Mystery solved!) Second, I have what some would consider an enviably kitschy mint green light leak in the bottom center of nearly every image. I’m not keen on it myself, especially since the camera actually makes some decent, otherwise usable images with vignetting and blur at the edges.
