In 2015, Irish camera collector William Fagan bought a Leica III camera that dates back to 1935. He got the vintage camera with film, protected in a Leica FILCA cassette, which Fagan set aside and revisited only this summer.
When he finally developed it, however, the images came out really good. No wonder—Fagan took the 70-year-old Perutz film to Mella Travers, who owns The Darkroom in Dublin, and the two carefully worked on the film through a one-hour stand process with a diluted developer.
But this wasn’t the end of the adventure; it was just beginning. The 22 shots were trying to tell a story of a glamorous young woman and an older gentleman in what appeared to be their journey through Europe.
Fagan said the photos were so personal, his initial instincts were saying he shouldn’t be looking at them. It was like peeking into a stranger’s family photo album. Or their memories. But the man couldn’t shake one thought: what if he could track down the family of the couple in the images? He estimates the shots date back to the early 1950s, so the couple—if they were still alive—would have to be quite elderly.

Image credits: William Fagan
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