Happy Accidents

Historic stone mill on the Rideau Canal captured as a pinhole photograph
Meditations on the Rideau – Field Note 002
Historic stone mill on the Rideau Canal captured as a pinhole photograph
Watson’s Mill, Manotick, Ontario
[ Pinhole photograph, ONDU 4×5 camera, Ilford Delta 100 film, 60-second exposure ]

By any technical measure this photograph should have gone straight to the reject pile: soft focus, low contrast, and, in particular, uneven development. I’m not entirely sure what happened along the right side of the image, and it’s the kind of work I would normally never show.

And yet I keep returning to it. The mood feels thick with memory, a fold in time where the past and present briefly coexist.

This is Watson’s Mill in Manotick, built in 1860 on the Rideau Canal as a flour mill. Photographing it with a wooden pinhole camera and a long exposure on large format film felt like a reach across time, using a process that would have been familiar in its earliest years. The result feels like it could have been made at any point in the last 165 years.

So is this a creative failure? I don’t think so. It may not be the picture I intended, but it tells a story of the mill in a way high resolution and modern digital clarity never could. Sometimes the camera leads us exactly where we need to go. A happy accident.


Published by Scott Murphy

Photography for the love of it.

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