After five long days at my new job, I was awarded a well-deserved holiday, and not a moment too soon. And if we can only persuade the Kenyans to run the Boston Marathon on a regular basis, then I’ll be able to maintain this delightful schedule of five days on, three days off.

What to do with my day off? Well, now that I have developed a number of rolls of 120 film, I have been thinking about branching out to 35mm. I decided to take advantage of the fine weather to shoot a roll with Husband’s pinhole camera, which I haven’t used for over two years, according to the post. So I dragged out the tripod and headed out to the salt marsh.

Pinhole cameras are the lowest of the low tech. There is only one aperture setting; shutter speed is controlled by your steady hand and “one Mississippi, two Mississippi”; and there is no viewfinder for framing the shot, so you just point the box at your (preferably still) subject and hope for the best.

Landscape photography is not really my thing, but it was fun to try something different. VoilĂ :

marsh

These steps lead down from an observation post at the wildlife sanctuary. We’re still waiting for leaves here in New England. The film was overexposed, so I did a bit of adjusting on the computer. This shot looks completely different on three different computer monitors, so I’m not sure what it looks like for you.

Et voici:

noevacuation

See what I mean about being unable to frame the shot? This condemned shack sits alongside the only route to the island. “No evacuation possible” refers to the fact that if the road washes out in an emergency, the islanders will be swimming for it. “Got KI?” is a reminder to keep a supply of potassium iodide on hand, in case there is a nuclear accident severe enough to pose a threat of thyroid cancer, but not so severe that you’d be instant toast, in which case the KI wouldn’t do much good. Potassium iodide is something of a local obsession — the emergency response calendars they hand out every year remind you to get some, and if you send your kids to public school you have to sign a permission slip authorizing the school nurse to administer it. I think the pinhole effect adds a nice apocalyptic aura to the picture.

The pinhole experiment was so much fun, I find myself thinking, “How low can I go?” How can I push the boundaries of photographic technology even further…back? Then I saw this article in the New York Times and immediately though, “That’s going to be my next camera.”