Lovely shots. Andrej, your lith work is always captivating as is Peter's pinhole. Frank, welcome to the forum. It's nice to see your work here. I like the splashes of color on what looks to be an otherwise dreary day.
Here are a couple from a car show I was at recently.
FTn-Ektachrome64T-018 by
James Harr, on Flickr
FTn-Ektachrome64T-001 by
James Harr, on Flickr
Nikkormat FTn + 50/1.4
Expired Kodachrome 64D @ iso 12
What I have put together about this film is that Satish's great uncle Kumar had bought it in Mumbai in 1962, but it slipped in back of the spare tire on the way home and was forgotten for the better part of a decade. The car was eventually bought by a well-traveled Bedouin who drove it to Riyadh where he got a flat tire. He found the film, but being a Bedouin, only had a Brownie that took 127 film. So he traded it for a tire iron. At this point the story gets a bit fuzzy and the film seems to trade hands a number of times before being put in an ammo can and left in the village square of Sbaa Algeria where it stayed for about 14 years before being blown in a particularly strong sand storm all the way to Tangier. A Portugese merchant found it and shipped it with a cargo container full of fine leather shoes to an importer named Hoss in Texas, USA. Hoss didn't know anything about film, so he put it out in the barn, where coincidentally Phil Bebbington took a photo of it at one point. It stayed there until Hoss's grand-daughter was rummaging around looking for horse shoe nails and found it. She put it on a big auction site where Satish was unwittingly reunited with his great uncle Kumar's film. He traded some of it to me and I took these photos.