One day in October, Sarah and I spontaneously decided to go to Mosquito Hill. We have been going there for years. Almost weekly from the thaw until the eponymous mosquitos made it impossible in June and then again for leaf peeping until deep snow in December or sometimes in January. I have exposed great amounts of film there to the point that I put together a small book and had an exhibit in their gallery. We hadn't been there since before the pandemic.
In my bag of film in the freezer, there was a 24 exposure roll of Kodacolor Gold 400. I never use ISO 400 film, mostly because the exposures in the sunlight are shorter than you can do manually even with card-waving over the pinhole. I think I found it in the bag with my Olympus XA2 and Canon F-1. It could be left over from our Silver Anniversary trip to Paris and London in 2000. It was a dark and gloomy day so I wasn't too concerned about the exposures. Little Guinness was still sitting on the kitchen table.
The negatives came back a week and a half later (Don't you miss one-hour processing?). I noticed the contrast mask was at least a stop darker than recent negatives. Scanning them, the color balance was, let's say, unusual. There was liberal use of color balance, levels and brightness/contrast, occasionally using auto color for suggestions, some of which I accepted. Dense negatives from fast films in 35mm pinhole cameras can be pretty grainy. Cool! These may be a little more impressionist, if that's OK, Alfred.
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