Tag: found film

  • Found Film Friday: Good Times for the “Smith” Family

    Over the last couple of weeks, we’ve gotten to know a family (dubbed “Smith” by me) via a pile of undeveloped film from the 1960s which ended up with me. The Smith family was primarily into photographing the kids, but also occasionally the grandparents turn up, during all of the major family events. Hence we…

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  • Found Film: The Smith Family Celebrates Easter

    Last week we met the “Smith” family (as I’ve decided to name them), celebrating Christmas in a series of moments captured on Kodacolor-X film – manufactured between 1963 and 1972 – on an unknown camera.  This week it appears they’ve moved on to Easter. This fellow seems to be the favorite of the photographer, as…

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  • Found Film: The Smith Family Celebrates Christmas

    I have no idea who this family is, but now that I have developed a bunch of their pictures,  I’ve gotten to know them a bit and it only seems appropriate to give them a name.  I’m calling them the Smith Family.  The Smiths were pretty good about photographing family events and trips, but it…

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  • Found Film Friday: Brownie Hawkeye

    This week’s found film comes from the inside of a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. The Brownie Hawkeye is a camera made in the 1950s.  It takes 620 rollfilm, and this camera contained a roll like the one below, which uses a process called C-22, no longer used nowadays (modern film is developed using the C-41 process).…

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  • Found Film Friday: Santa Fe Porsche Show

    This week’s roll of found film came to me from “Mike” – a collector of old slides who was giving up on a “found film” hobby, he sent me a half dozen or so rolls and acknowledged there was a small chance one of the rolls might be his own. Up until now, none had,…

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  • “Found Film Friday” on a Sunday

    Since around May, 2013, I have been posting “found film” finds pretty regularly – and for the last 8 months, it has been every Friday like clockwork.  This weekend is the first time I missed a Friday, thanks to an outage by my internet provider.  We get great high-speed internet, but sometimes are surprised by…

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  • Found Film: 1949 Chevy

    This week’s roll of “found film” comes from a Kodak Six-16 Brownie Junior, made between 1934 and 1942.  From a technology standpoint, it’s virtually indistinguishable from a Brownie Target Six-16, made between 1946 and 1951.  Given the pace of technology these days, it’s odd to think that a camera would have one so many years…

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  • Found Film Friday: New Year’s Road Trip 1994

    …and just like that, we go from “class”…to a little bit crass.  After weeks of posting historically meaningful post-war photos that were rescued from oblivion, we have a roll of pictures that looks like it was snapped on a three-day college drinkfest that involved a bus, a bar, and what looks like a bunch of…

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  • Found Film: Korea, 1946, roll 4 (Homecoming)

    This is the fourth and final installment in a series of posts about four rolls of film that were found among items acquired in an estate sale in rural Washington state. To recap what I think I can safely assume from the content in these photos, they appear to have been taken by a U.S.…

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  • Found Film: Korea, 1946 – part 2

    Last week I posted about the first of four rolls of already-developed film I had come across via a seller on eBay, and have been scanning and restoring one by one.  This is the second roll, which provides a whole new set of clues as to the photographer and their living conditions in Korea, just…

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  • Found Film Friday: Yellowstone Part 4

    This is the last of four posts on a big pile of found film I got recently – 13 rolls of Ektachrome slide film requiring processing using E2 and E3 chemical processes, neither of which have been available since the early 1970s.  The photos were mostly in and around Yellowstone National Park; a few rolls…

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  • Found Film Friday: Yellowstone part 3

    This is the third week I’ve been posting from this set of 13 rolls of film, from in and near Yellowstone National Park….but 13 rolls is a lot of pictures!  I know not everyone is particularly enamored with these photos – after all, anyone who has ever been to the park probably has a lot…

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  • Found Film Friday: Yellowstone Part 2

    Last week I posted the first installment in a series of posts in which I share images from a collection of 14 rolls of Ektachrome slide film requiring an outdated chemical process, but which I decided to develop with black and white chemicals.  In this set of pictures, we see the photographer’s continued photographic journey…

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  • Found Film Friday: Yellowstone, Part 1

    I’d say “everybody has pictures from a trip to Yellowstone,” if I had ever been myself.  But I have previously posted a “found film” roll that featured shots from that national park.  A few weeks ago, I received 14 rolls of film I had bought – for a pretty good price, if they ended up…

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  • Found Film Friday: Two Dim Color Rolls

    With old film, conventional wisdom says it’s best to develop it in black and white chemicals, regardless whether the film was originally color film or black and white.  Apparently the different colored dyes not only break down more quickly than black and white chemicals, but also at different rates.  I decided to try anyway with…

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  • Found Film Friday: Year Round

    This week’s “found film” is the last of four rolls that were found in a storage unit in Worcester, Massachusetts.  There’s not a whole lot to say about this week’s roll, other than it makes me think of how we used to take pictures, compared to how we take pictures now.   This 24-picture roll…

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  • Found Film Friday: Hannah’s Tenth Birthday

    This week is the second of three “found film” Friday posts in which I’m sharing film that was found (by someone else) in a storage unit in Worcester, Massachusetts.  The first post, last week, was a 110 cartridge from what appeared to be a young girl’s first camera.  I decided her name was “Hannah”, although…

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  • Found Film: Hannah and her Sister

    This week we have one of three rolls found (by someone else) in a storage unit in Worcester, Massachusetts.  This set of film rolls is interesting in that they are all different types of film, and thus came from different cameras.  There is a fourth in the set, which I already posted a few weeks…

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  • Found Film Friday: Laguna Beach Photowalk

    After last week’s “surfing” theme, I thought it would be fun to share another roll with a seaside theme.  This one is not that old, and it came with the same batch of film as “Michelle’s” fisheye roll, and “Mike’s” roll.  Like the other rolls, this one includes a “selfie.”  After having seen this batch…

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  • Found Film: Everybody’s Gone Surfing

    This week’s found film has a little bit of a story to it. It was found by someone in a storage unit in Worcester, Massachusetts. I wrote them back and asked for more details, but didn’t get any. But anyhow, the film was advertised as “4 exposed rolls and 2 unexposed rolls”. They were 35mm…

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  • Found Film: Seasons

    This week, I thought I’d post TWO rolls of found film. One roll has suffered quite a bit from age, and the other only had a couple of usable photos on it. I’m titling this post based on the photos having been taken opposite times of year. There is no other relationship between the two…

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  • Found Film Friday: Dress-Up Dog

    This week’s roll of found film is a roll of 620 panchromatic that not much is known about, other than that it came from an estate sale near Alliance, Ohio.  I had quite a bit of trouble loading it into the developer tank.  As I was unrolling it in the dark, it was extremely difficult…

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  • Found Film Friday: New Baby AND a New TV!

    Sometimes when I develop these “found” rolls of film I find it kind of sad that their original owners forgot to do so themselves.  This is one of those times.  The fact that I picked up these rolls on eBay suggests they came from an estate sale, which means the photographers are likely no longer…

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  • Found: Michelle’s Fisheye Film

    It’s “Found Film” Friday, and this week’s “found” roll comes to us from the same place as last week’s roll – but appears to be from a different photographer.  Among that set of different 35mm rolls, none of which appeared to be particularly old, one had been marked with permanent marker, “Dev for Michelle” (the…

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  • Found Film Friday: It Doesn’t Have to Be Old

    One of the fun aspects of “found film” is the fact that it’s usually old, and developing it opens a window into a forgotten past, maybe involving forgotten people.  But this week’s roll is an oddity in that it’s not that old at all.  Which I find strange. I picked this up as one of…

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