I've not shot film since going digital in 2004.  There were about a  dozen rolls of film in my possession that have been sitting in the  fridge even though they all expired in 2006.   Recently I came across a  creative exercise in David DuChemin's 
Ten More, to shoot monochrome as a  way to learn to see lines, tones and gestures without the color.  David  even suggested shooting black and white film with a manual camera, to  give color and all the digitalness a much needed break.  I was itching  to pop a roll into my Nikon FE, my first camera given to me by my dad in  1983. However, I needed a partner in crime, someone crazy enough to hop  down the block with me because, "hopping down the block on one foot is a  lot less silly if you find a friend to do it with."  At about the same  time my friend, the fabulous 
Shannon Sewell,  also found her long-since-forgotten film camera and some expired film.   So we conspired to go on a little serendipitous adventure together.
We  went down to the Old Town section of Portland and just wandered around  to see what interesting subjects would come our way.  True to the spirit  of serendipity, a group of monks in their red robes appeared in front  of our eyes to cross the street.  Well that red color would really stand out in  the black-and-white---NOT!  That became the running joke of the day, "I  wonder how that would look in black and white."  Color contrast was to  take a back seat because of the medium, yet I did not know how to shoot for black-and-white  because of my unfamiliarity with it.  I had few expectations because  the film was so expired in the first place.  I was ready if nothing  turned out at all.  Yet we went through the exercise of carefully  exposing and composing the shots, because it was not free  like shooting digital.  Except we kept wanting to chimp--to look at the  non-existing LCD to make sure we we got "the shot."  Several times I  clicked the shutter and nothing happened because I had forgotten to  advance the film after the previous shot!  It was interesting to return  to film after so many years of shooting digital.   Personally, digital has helped me become a better photographer.
It  took a good week and then some before we would see the prints.  Boy what a  surprise!  They turned out way better than what I had expected.  I was  beyond thrilled and I will let the images speak for themselves.  Somehow the prints came back in sepia, which was also, serendipitously, unexpected.   Incidentally, my flatbed scanner is so old that it no longer works with  the new computer.  So I "scanned" the prints with my 12MP digital camera  mounted on a tripod...













