Mr_Flibble
In Tabulas Argenteas Refero
A couple weeks ago I spent the weekend at Fort Veldhuis, near Heemskerk as part of a Living History display with several Dutch Living History groups.
The Fort holds the Aircraft Recovery Foundation 1940-1945 Museum, where the public can wonder through the Chambrés between the recovered parts of crashed WW2 aircraft and see what life was like in WW2 Holland.
It was by the Museum's invitation that the field outside the fort was dotted with a number of encampments featuring World War II US Army and German Wehrmacht units.
Some of the groups represented were the 17th Combat Engineers, 7th Armored Tank Destroyers, 29th Infantry Division and Panzergrenadiers from Der Windhund division.
The event was an opportunity for me to test my Leica IIIc that had remained unused since February, when I encountered some shutter bounce or drag or possibly a light leak. I had given it a good clean and was wondering if the problems had been fixed.
Normally I prefer a 90mm Elmar at events but my Summar had been neglected for long enough. I loaded the camera with Kodak BW400CN and put a No.2 Yellow filter over the lens. Of course in my haste to get out of the house I left the FIKUS-hood on my desk.
I used my CV II lightmeter to confirm my guesses before snapping, to correct my personal tendency under-expose.
17th Engineer loading blanks into 8-round clips for the Mock Battles and Weapon/Equipment Demonstrations
German Sniper armed with a Mauser Kar98k with ZF.41 scope
German Funker (Radioman); Cropped from a landscape image and sharpened. Of course his cap was already cut off at the top.
Our freshly-promoted Corporal taking a break in the shade. (Image slightly cropped)
A 'POW' being served some soup by a French Resistance fighter.
A fellow classic-camera enthusiast in his Wehrmacht uniform. This image was smart-sharpened and cropped slightly for a better composition.
All negatives were scanned at 600dpi, 300% scaling, adaptive lighting and scratch/dust correction on, on my HP G4050 (which is sooo darn slow 🙁 )
Hope you like them,
Rick
The Fort holds the Aircraft Recovery Foundation 1940-1945 Museum, where the public can wonder through the Chambrés between the recovered parts of crashed WW2 aircraft and see what life was like in WW2 Holland.
It was by the Museum's invitation that the field outside the fort was dotted with a number of encampments featuring World War II US Army and German Wehrmacht units.
Some of the groups represented were the 17th Combat Engineers, 7th Armored Tank Destroyers, 29th Infantry Division and Panzergrenadiers from Der Windhund division.
The event was an opportunity for me to test my Leica IIIc that had remained unused since February, when I encountered some shutter bounce or drag or possibly a light leak. I had given it a good clean and was wondering if the problems had been fixed.
Normally I prefer a 90mm Elmar at events but my Summar had been neglected for long enough. I loaded the camera with Kodak BW400CN and put a No.2 Yellow filter over the lens. Of course in my haste to get out of the house I left the FIKUS-hood on my desk.
I used my CV II lightmeter to confirm my guesses before snapping, to correct my personal tendency under-expose.

17th Engineer loading blanks into 8-round clips for the Mock Battles and Weapon/Equipment Demonstrations

German Sniper armed with a Mauser Kar98k with ZF.41 scope

German Funker (Radioman); Cropped from a landscape image and sharpened. Of course his cap was already cut off at the top.

Our freshly-promoted Corporal taking a break in the shade. (Image slightly cropped)

A 'POW' being served some soup by a French Resistance fighter.

A fellow classic-camera enthusiast in his Wehrmacht uniform. This image was smart-sharpened and cropped slightly for a better composition.
All negatives were scanned at 600dpi, 300% scaling, adaptive lighting and scratch/dust correction on, on my HP G4050 (which is sooo darn slow 🙁 )
Hope you like them,
Rick