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Another dull, chilly, wet day, so a bit of indoor playing ... for my daily pic.
I asked the OH if he still had any old pens and ink, and as he like me is a squirrel, he had several.
It's been a while since any have been used and getting the lid off this bottle was an effort. Who knew ink went mouldy, coz that's what it looks like round the rim of the bottle.
Anyways, this is for the 365 treasure hunt, number 32 ink.
..i'm gonna use a Pen S from early sixtie's, manual, and Kodak Tmax P3200 @6400..so i'll be back later in this fall of '20..
I have suddenly fallen in love with my old fountain pen and have enjoyed writing with it again in recent days.
95/123 pictures in 2023: something on your desk
From the limestone pastures near Selside, looking over Ribblesdale. The drystone walls are limestone.
Pen-y-Ghent, at 694m one of the Three Peaks of Yorkshire, is made up of a millstone grit top set upon a bed of carboniferous limestone. The summit lies on the main watershed of England with water flowing eastwards into the River Skirfare and on through to the Humber Estuary to the North Sea, and water flowing westwards draining directly into the River Ribble, to flow onwards into the Irish Sea. (Based on Wikipedia).
Camera: Olympus Pen D;
Lens: Zuiko 32mm f/1.9;
Film: Agfa AviPhotPan_400;
Filter: No filter;
Exposure: as ISO 400
Scanned: Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400 by VueScan.
I was in Wales, and to discover Snowdonia, I decided to do the Miner's trail hike from Pen-Y-Pass (360m elevation~1180ft) to the Snowdon Summit (1085m~560ft).
The weather was foggy and windy as I started the hike. But you know, you can make the ascent, then be higher than the fog while you arrive at the summit, and get a nice foggy view to take pictures of (which happened to me several times in San Francisco).
After 1 hour walking, the fog was so thick that there was no visibility above 10 meters.
This is why I lost the trail several times, and was completely soaked (due to the severe humidity in that fog).
Anyway, I did it to the summit where it was very windy...And no visibility at all due to THE FOG! So I did not wait until the golden hour to take photos, I went back to Pen-Y-Pass and I took this picture..
Being out of the country at the moment in the sunshine I seem to be missing the snow that appears to have ground the country to a halt. You can’t win them all. So, here’s a shot from two weeks ago at the summit of Pen-y-Ghent. As can be seen the conditions were vile and only six of the previous days Ingleborough party of eleven ventured out. It wasn’t a day for photography so this will be my only picture from that particular outing. I have uploaded it to show the conditions not for any photographic merit.
A fountain pen is a nib pen that, unlike its predecessor, the dip pen, contains an internal reservoir of liquid ink. The pen draws ink from the reservoir through a feed to the nib and deposits it on paper via a combination of gravity and capillary action.
Filling the reservoir with ink may be achieved manually (via the use of a Pasteur pipette or syringe) or via an internal filling mechanism which creates suction (for example, through a piston mechanism) to transfer ink directly through the nib into the reservoir. Some pens employ removable reservoirs in the form of pre-filled ink cartridges. A fountain pen needs little or no pressure on the nib to write. World Fountain Pen Day is celebrated on the first Friday of November every year by the lovers of fountain pens.
Gwaith gwreiddiol: braslunio 'en plein air' mewn pensel, siarcol a dyfrlliw (unlliw)
Original artwork: sketch en plein air using soluble graphite pencil, charcoal, watercolour (mono - ivory black).
Olympus Pen Standard
D.Zuiko 1:3.5 2.8cm
Ilford FP4+ D76 stok 7.5min
街の息吹 浦川あつ子・谷智人・東もと奈・民田葉子 写真展 2019/11/15