View allAll Photos Tagged FujiC200,
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A small and docile chicken.
Result of the meeting of an ordinary red hen and an Ardennes rooster.
Fruit des amours d'une poule rousse et d'un coq ardennais.
Il lui reste quelques plumes claires qui lui donnent l'air mal dans sa peau d'un adolescent. Le petit toupet sur le crâne m'intrigue un peu.
FujiColor C200
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.
A series of images taken in and around Aarhus with my very first camera, the Kodak S100, which I got as a Christmas present from my parents in 1988 (when I was 10) and still own today.
It is a camera with a 35mm lens, one shutter speed (probably 1/100s or 1/60s), fixed focus, and three aperture settings. Has a built-in flash, but except for the flash it works without batteries (no meter). It has survived everything from family holidays in the 80s to interrail in the 90s, festivals, parties, you name it. Unbreakable, and the results are pleasingly lo-fi.