HaarFager

HaarFager club

Posted: 08 May 2018


Taken: 08 May 2018

1 favorite     2 comments    269 visits

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Keywords

B&W
Old Cameras
Kodak Photo-Flo 200
Found Film
Ilford Hypam Fixer
Ilford Ilfostop Stop Bath
Black and White Photogray
Dutch Wonderland Theme Park
Theme Parks
Buggies
Old Film
Black and White Film
Adox Adonal
Kodak
Black and White
Horses
Amish
B&W Film
B&W Photography
Kodak Verichrome Pan
Dutch Wonderland
Kodak Film
Amish Buggies


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269 visits


Amish Buggy - Found Film

Amish Buggy - Found Film
This is an image from a roll of found film I got when I bought a camera from one of the downtown antique stores. I don't know when the pictures were taken, but they look to be from the 1970s. On another one of the negatives, the name "Dutch Wonderland" and "Lancaster, Pennsylvania" can be clearly seen. I looked it up and it's a theme park that was opened in 1963 and is still open, and is located just east of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The pictures are situated on the negatives in such a way that the film spooled from up and down, not left and right. This particular image was straightened and cropped to remove some of the bad part of the negative on both sides.

Developing chemicals:
Presoak in 20°C/68.0°F water
Adox Adonal 1+50 (500ml water, 2 tsp. Adox Adonal) for 15 minutes at 20°C/68.0°F
15 second initial agitation, then 5 second gentle (wine glass swirl) agitation each minute
2 minutes water rinse
Ilford lfostop, 30 second agitation, 30 second stand
2 minutes water rinse
Ilford Hypam Fixer, 8 minutes, 5 second gentle agitation each minute
2 minutes rinse in water
3 drops Photo-Flo final rinse for 60 seconds

Kodak Verichrome Pan Found Film 11ef

Nouchetdu38 has particularly liked this photo


Comments
 raingirl
raingirl club
wow - such dedication! what a great image to have rescued. but what was the camera that did that with the film?
5 years ago.
HaarFager club has replied to raingirl club
I suspect that it could have been a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Flash, or some kind of camera that the film travels up and down, not left to right. That's how the images were arranged on the negative strip.
5 years ago.

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