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Accidently opened 35mm camera with Efke 25 - how bad?

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StorminMatt

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Today, I picked up what I thought was my empty EOS 3 to load with some Kodachrome. But it turns out I picked up my Elan 7, which had a roll of Efke 25 that was on somewhere around the 25th exposure. It happened in a dim room, rather than outside in the sun. And the camera was open for no more than a second. But I figure I probably lost at least a couple of shots. How bad is this? Did I just lose more than just a few shots? Also, I want to process this film by dr5, which is somewhat expensive. Is it worth it to even process the film? Or should it just be thrown out?
 
Probably only a few shots. I did this once in bright sun with faster film and only a few frames were lost. There was some edge exposure on other frames, but it didn't extend into the frames. I bet you will be fine.
 
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I'm the yes man. Did the same once and kept shooting. Only the film from the cannister to the reel and a couple more were exposed.
 
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Both replies are correct, unless you'd opened the back too long (which you haven't) you won't lose too many frames so chance it and send it to dr5.

Ian
 
You'll be OK, the film between the canister and the take-up spool usually gets the bulk of the damage, everything already wound on usually just gets some fogging on the edges, outside of the picture area. I've done this a few times :wink:
 
Hi StorminMatt,

You're risking 2 beers at the ballpark (or similar venue :>) ) Go for it.

Neal Wydra
 
I've got away losing just a couple of frames in a dim room and that was with acros 100 so you should be OK.
 
You blew a few exposures. Get over it. We all did it at some time.

Shoot another roll of film and you will feel better in the morning.

Steve
 
I've done the same thing a few times and only lost a few frames. The horror of opening the back is overcome by the good frames that remain.
 
Undeveloped film is almost lightproof. I would estimate that you lost 2-5 last frames you shot.
 
Is it worth it to even process the film? Or should it just be thrown out?

If I'm not mistaken, all Canon EOS cameras actually wind the whole roll out when you load, and then rewind as you shoot, so you shouldn't have lost much at all. If your camera works like my fiancee's Rebel K2, most of your shots were quite literally in the can when you opened the back. Some portion of the unshot film would still be fogged, of course. I'm not a Canon user but this is a nice feature!
 
If I'm not mistaken, all Canon EOS cameras actually wind the whole roll out when you load, and then rewind as you shoot, so you shouldn't have lost much at all. If your camera works like my fiancee's Rebel K2, most of your shots were quite literally in the can when you opened the back. Some portion of the unshot film would still be fogged, of course. I'm not a Canon user but this is a nice feature!

I believe that this is a feature only on the consumer cameras, as they believe only consumers and not pros/power users would make this mistake :D
 
I believe that this is a feature only on the consumer cameras, as they believe only consumers and not pros/power users would make this mistake :D

Well, I've never really used an EOS camera much myself; it seems like a very useful feature that a pro would want. I imagine most people here have accidentally fogged at least one roll of film this way. I know I've done it a couple times!

At any rate I would definitely develop the roll and see what I got.
 
Well, I've never really used an EOS camera much myself; it seems like a very useful feature that a pro would want. I imagine most people here have accidentally fogged at least one roll of film this way. I know I've done it a couple times!

At any rate I would definitely develop the roll and see what I got.

It is a pretty useful feature, though pros probably don't have the time to wait for a whole roll to wind out onto the takeup spool every time they load a roll.
 
I believe that this is a feature only on the consumer cameras, as they believe only consumers and not pros/power users would make this mistake :D
yep!
found on the rebel series, not on any of the Elans. The OP opened his Elan. durn Canons all look alike.
 
It is a pretty useful feature, though pros probably don't have the time to wait for a whole roll to wind out onto the takeup spool every time they load a roll.

I seem to remember my EOS 1 did it, but I could be mistaken
 
The Elan is pretty much ready to shoot right away after loading, and takes a while to rewind. So I don't think it has this feature. My EOS 3 is exactly the same in this respect, so I would guess only the Rebels have this feature.
 
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