My good friend from Buffalo, New York, sent me a roll of Kodak Panatomic-X film! Where did he find this treasure? Was this the last roll on earth?
Panatomic-X was Eastman Kodak's great achievement from the middle of the 20th century, film-making excellence from the golden age of film photography. I have written about Panatomic-X before and concluded that because of the age, it is not worth seeing out unexposed rolls. But here was a great gift, so I headed out with nostalgia and anticipation. Thirty years ago, I typically exposed it at EI=20 or 25. This film has a reputation of aging well (as long as it was stored cool), so I decided to use it again at EI=20. This required a tripod for most frames. I used my 1950s Voigtländer Vito BL, a precise little camera with a superb 4-element coated 50mm ƒ/3.5 Color Skopar lens. This was a 1950s recompilation of the Tessar type of lens. And I had genuine Voigtländer color filters. A classic film in a classic camera, what could be better?
Olympia
Here are some frames from my April 2025 walk around Olympia, Washington. It was a hazy spring day with no sky texture.
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Tracks near Jefferson Street, view north (1/4 ƒ/11, light yellow filter) |
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Homeless people, Jefferson Street |
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Handsome traditional wood architecture on 9th Avenue (1/4 ƒ/11, light yellow filter) |
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Burned out black house, now demolished (1/4 ƒ/11, light yellow filter) |
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7th Avenue railroad tunnel east entrance (1/4 ƒ/11, medium yellow filter) |
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215 Thurston Avenue |
This is an interesting door, and the markings change occasionally. I have photographed it before. (Update October 10, 2025: the building has been painted and this doorway is now boring)
Union, Washington
The Hunter Farm, on Washington Rte. 106, has a big barn and numerous out buildings.
I love these kinds of complicated scenes. I will ask the owners sometime if I can return with my large format camera.
This ends our short tour with the famous Panatomic-X film. Standby for examples from Shelton, Washington.