It's always a "Wonder how these turned out", especially when I am shooting with 60+ year old gear. It's part of the fun of shooting film
(Anyone know a good repairer in the UK who can deal with these cameras, advice appreciated ? )
Paul at MS Hobbies works on these. He says the problem is the magnets in the shutter. It can be fixed he says.
Mishaps? If you mean mistakes then I have plenty. If you mean the camera malfunction that I didn't know until the film was developed? That I had a few.
1. I had an Nikon FA and I checked it and it was fine before loading film. I didn't know that it ocasionally shoot at 1/4000 regardless.
2. My Nikkor 20mm f/2.8 AF-D lens aperture was stuck. I didn't know until the film was developed and the shot was overexposed and not having the DOF I expected. Checked the lens and found it doesn't stop down.
Mishaps? If you mean mistakes then I have plenty. If you mean the camera malfunction that I didn't know until the film was developed? That I had a few.
1. I had an Nikon FA and I checked it and it was fine before loading film. I didn't know that it ocasionally shoot at 1/4000 regardless.
2. My Nikkor 20mm f/2.8 AF-D lens aperture was stuck. I didn't know until the film was developed and the shot was overexposed and not having the DOF I expected. Checked the lens and found it doesn't stop down.
Yes I mean that you technique was 100% spotless but when you got your film back, something was just wrong.
I do wonder thou back in the days, how did commercial and wedding photographers experience this with their clients? I guess medium format they shot polaroids but what about 35mm ... I read that 35mm had polaroids also but many who shot 35mm didn't use them right.
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