Phew! And I wanted to congratulate you for your BIG luck that your 'old' film still produced pictures with such a snappy b/w contrast!
I once did a b/w documentation of a sawmill in a neighbor village, but then somehow forgot to develop the two films. About three years later I found them again, developped them right away... And all I got was pictures with a contrast ranging from light gray (where the original was white) to a somewhat darker gray (where the original was black). You just can see what the photograph should show, but all the fine details are lost... :curse: (And of course in the meantime the sawmill was torn down.
)
Turkey, I also still have an old Kodak Brownie - but to be honest, the fix-focus lenses of these box cameras weren't exactly hi-precision marvels. Instead of a crisp print they produced an uniform blur over the whole picture. But nobody really realized it in these times, because it already was hi-tech to produce YOUR VERY OWN PHOTOGRAPHS!!! (On the other side it is amazing, how many extremely fine details you can see on the glass negative prints of the heavy, box-like 18. century cameras!)
Nutbar - I hope you'll dig in your other drawers, and perhaps you'll find another roll of a long-forgotten film to sahare with us!
Ron