Bridgeview Tavern, Sleepy Hollow, NY

I’ve been having a weekly lunch with a friend for the past few weeks. On this occasion we went to the Bridgeview Tavern. It’s a pleasant establishment serving pub style food. The overall ambience is welcoming and the staff were very friendly. One entire side of the restaurant has a fantastic view of the Hudson River and the Tappan Zee.

Very pleasant.

As we were leaving it started to snow.

Taken with a Minolta Hi-Matic 9 and TMAX-100.

Film Camera 2019/1 – Minolta Hi-Matic 9 – Results

So the verdict is: Keep the camera, change the photographer.

When I first got the results back from the lab I was very disappointed. I didn’t think any of pictures were any good. They were all underexposed. After adjusting the exposure in Lightroom they looked a lot better, but why the underexposure in the first place? Then it occurred to me that I didn’t remember putting a battery in. Who knows how long the old battery had been in there? And it might not even have been the right battery in the first place. I suppose this could have caused the underexposure. Lesson learned: make sure that the camera has a fresh battery.

Then I chose the wrong film. It’s Winter here in NY state and the days are usually quite gloomy. For some reason I chose to use an ISO 100 film. Maybe this would have worked if I hadn’t been using the camera in its fully automatic mode. The lowish ISO combined with the dark conditions probably caused the camera to chose a wide aperture with consequent shallow depth of field (as you can see in the second picture below). It may also have chosen a slow shutter speed, contributing to camera shake. Lesson learned: choose an ISO better suited to the conditions you’re shooting in.

Framing issues. As far as I can tell the camera has no parallax correction mechanisms, not even markings in the viewfinder. This caused me to miss the framing in a number of close compositions. Lesson learned: not sure.

The pictures are particularly uninspired. When I’m testing a new camera the pictures are not usually very spectacular, but in this case they’re particularly bad. Usually I go to a new place and find some new (to me) and sometimes interesting opportunities for pictures. On this occasion it was cold and gloomy. I didn’t really want to be walking around taking pictures, but I felt I had to finish the roll. So I just walked around in the immediate vicinity of our house taking pictures of anything that seemed vaguely interesting (most of them weren’t). Lesson learned: Don’t go out taking pictures if you’re not inclined to do so.

Still after some correction in Lightroom the pictures were not the worst I’ve every taken. I think I’ll try it again this time in better conditions, with an appropriate film and using fully manual or semi automatic settings so that I at least know what aperture/shutter combination is being chosen.

The two pictures in this post were taken in a lovely 1930s vintage diner in Peekskill, NY: The Center Diner.

A walk around Mount Kisco – Self portrait with church

I’d been taking some pictures of the St. Francis African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and turned around to see if there were any photographic opportunities looking over/through the fence separating the road from the railroad tracks. I noticed this mirror…

I like the “fisheye” effect.

Taken with an Olympus Stylus Epic/Mju II and Kodak Tri-X 400.

A walk around Mount Kisco – Old agricultural equipment

A small stream runs through Mount Kisco and crosses under West Main Street near the Native American Statue. I’ve no idea whether it has a name, but I’m guessing it’s a tributary of the Kisco River. On either side of the stream is an area of green space and it’s there that I came across this piece of equipment. I have no idea whether it serves a function (e.g. in maintenance of the grass) or whether it’s purely decorative. Whichever it is the town is clearly afraid that it might be stolen and have chained it to a nearby tree stump.

Taken with an Olympus Stylus Epic/Mju II and Kodak Tri-X 400.