It's been over a year since I dug out the Canon AE-1 and threatened to use it. The early efforts were scary with a screeching noise every time I pressed the shutter, followed by a disaster when trying to rewind the first roll of film. Result was no images + a visit to the local repair shop.
Noise taken care of and a fresh roll of B&W film and all that remained was to identify suitable photo opportunities and remember to pack the AE-1 with the rest of the gear. This meant no birding or macro shots (although 200mm lens has a "macro" setting it's more a general close-up than insect world option), and there were more than a few outings where the camera stayed home.
However, the last frame was shot a week ago, the film successfully rewound, and posted off to AG labs in Birmingham (England not AL) to develop and digitise.
About a third of the shots went straight into the bin, about a third were sort of OK, and about a third are encouraging. The main problem was focusing - I found it quite difficult to get it right in poor light - followed by exposure - not quite the dynamic range of the D810 . It took a bit of time to get into the swing of the general operation too, remembering to wind on the film after each shot and not looking at the back to check the histogram ...
All of the images were grainy, and I'm not sure how much that is just because I've forgotten about film grain, or whether it was my choice of settings for the development. The film was Ilford FP4 (ISO 125) so should have been pretty good, and I elected for medium resolution scanning (4MB images) as a first step which would be not so great.
Here are a few of the resulting images:
1: Snow scenes from Glendevon:
2: Rannoch Station:
C&C welcome, especially from any film shooters