The Flickr Forgottenfilms Image Generatr

About

This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

Still life with 5 boxes of 1970s Kodak 110 film and a pack of GE Flash Cubes during the afternoon "golden hour" taken with freezer-stored Konica 110 film which had expired 3 years ago. Shot with a Pentax Auto-110, the smallest SLR ever made. Sept 1999 by WAVZ 13

© WAVZ 13, all rights reserved.

Still life with 5 boxes of 1970s Kodak 110 film and a pack of GE Flash Cubes during the afternoon "golden hour" taken with freezer-stored Konica 110 film which had expired 3 years ago. Shot with a Pentax Auto-110, the smallest SLR ever made. Sept 1999

Good old 110 film! Both Kodak and Fujifilm stopped making it around 2009, but Ferrania kept at it for several more years and sold it mostly in Dollar Stores. I was pleasantly surprised when Lomography brought this once popular film format back to life in 2011.

I'd like to hear YOUR memories about using 110 film.

Monkey guards the Hawgs! by sweirsweir

© sweirsweir, all rights reserved.

Monkey guards the Hawgs!

Found Biker Gang art. Back on August 30th 1972, Wayne Thomas a member of a Winsor Bike Gang living on Cadillac Street in Windsor, dropped off a roll of film to be developed in a Drouillard Rd store. He never came back to pick them up. Pictures shows his pet monkey standing guard over his Chopper Hawg. Picture taken near the Ford factory 48 years ago.

Forgotten film rescue from 1967. Mom at the piano in our living room. Light leaks galore caused by the cheap plastic Diana camera used to take this. A moment in time saved on 120 roll film. Milford, Connecticut. Aug 1967 by WAVZ 13

© WAVZ 13, all rights reserved.

Forgotten film rescue from 1967. Mom at the piano in our living room. Light leaks galore caused by the cheap plastic Diana camera used to take this. A moment in time saved on 120 roll film. Milford, Connecticut. Aug 1967

Several years ago while cleaning out some old boxes of junk, I found the Holy Grail - an unprocessed roll of Kodak Verichrome Pan 120 size film from my first camera. As I recall, it was a cheap "Diana" camera. Decades ago, at the age of 8, I had placed the roll back into the original yellow Kodak box and for some reason never got around to having it processed into prints.

I searched around on the internet and found Film Rescue International. Although a little leery about what they could capture from film this old, I was pleasantly surprised with the results. Foggy, grainy... it all adds to the atmosphere of images of time long gone by.

OK, fellow old timers... how many of you used the "Triple Print" color 126 film back in the early 1970s? I used to cut out coupons for free film from Popular Photography Magazine kept in the racks of my high school library. 1972 by WAVZ 13

© WAVZ 13, all rights reserved.

OK, fellow old timers... how many of you used the "Triple Print" color 126 film back in the early 1970s? I used to cut out coupons for free film from Popular Photography Magazine kept in the racks of my high school library.  1972

For processing, you had to mail it ONLY to Famous Brand Lab. Any Kodak processor wouldn't accept it! Does anybody know anything about this film, its emulsion and the processing it required?