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Kodak T400CN, expired 2005 |
The Film
Dear Readers, you may remember that in February (2024), I used some long-expired Kodak T400CN black and white film. Because it was old, I exposed it at EI=100 rather than the original 400. The results were successful, and the film is convenient because the infrared scratch tool in my Nikon Coolscan 5000 scanner cleans flaws and minor scratches.
In preparation for an upcoming trip, I bought some more T400CN film from an eBay seller who said they had been stored in a refrigerator. I shot identical scenes at 100, 200, and 400. The roll came back really thin. The 100 frames scanned adequately, but the 200 and 400 were hopeless. I must give credit to the Coolscan scanner because it extracted so much data from the 100 frames. And having the ICE function to clean scratches and dust saves an immense amount of time.
Results in Tumwater
Here are some more frames of the old Olympia Brewery in Tumwater. These are the 100 exposures, with minor adjustment in the brightness after scanning.
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(50mm F/2 Pentax-A lens, yellow-green filter) |
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35mm ƒ/2.8 Pentax-A lens at ƒ/4 |
The back of this building was peeled off. I heard that a company removed machines, and peeling off the wall was the only way to remove large equipment. Of course, now this eyesore sits here year after year.
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Waiting for a seat (50mm ƒ/2 lens at ƒ/8) |
This concrete hulk is next to Custer Way. The back, with the peeled off wall, is within sight of the historic Schmidt House, which is owned by the Olympia Tumwater Foundation. The foundation built the 15-acre park along the Deschutes River waterfalls.
Turn the corner to Capital Way. The Pacific Highway, formerly Route 99, runs over a 1938 bridge. It was decorated with Art Deco and Native American motifs.
View of Rte 99 north over 1938 bridge. (Photograph 1951-1960, Item P40_N02, courtesy of the Olympia Tumwater Foundation) |
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Figure on northwest side of Capital Way (Rte 99) |
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Totem post, northeast side of Capital Way (Rte 99) |
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Former North Pacific Restaurant |
The North Pacific Restaurant burned on June 25, 2024. Once popular with brewery workers, it had been unoccupied for many years. The "Cafe" in the color picture above is at the same location as the South Pacific (probably the same building). As of November 7, trucks were removing the debris and timbers.
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Factory walkways under the Rte 99 bridge |
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More walkways |
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View south past former powerhouse |
Summary
This roll of T400CN had lost at least 2 stops of sensitivity compared to when it was new (ISO 400). But I think the frames of the old brewery, taken on a grey day, look fine. They have a classic vintage black and white look, a bit gritty (grungy?) with some grain.
The frames above are from 50mm ƒ/2 and 35mm ƒ/2.8 Pentax-A lenses. I am impressed at the resolution of these modest-priced lenses (click any picture to expand it). Pentax made excellent glass in the 1970s, 1980s, and later, easily the equal of the big name companies. These mid-century lenses may not be as "sharp" as the newest optics, but does it make any difference?
Next roll: try at Exposure Index 50?
1 comment:
The gritty/grungy look of the film suits this subject matter!
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