Tom Kershaw
Subscriber
I've seen this effect on occasion when processing film in Paterson tanks.
Tom
Tom
Here's a scan of a couple of frames (excuse the dust).
Since Bronica got mentioned ...
For time exposures using the T setting on the lens, the shutter stays open until you push the slider back -- could that be happening here?
DaveT
Actually, I think I can see it as a shutter problem. ..... Guess I'll have to do some testing on all my lenses to make sure everything's working as it should.
You can get horizontal bromide drag through unidirectional agitation, but it is rare. In any case, this looks more like film movement while the shutter is open than anything else, but there are no other ghost images. I think I would expect that to happen if it was film movement.
PE
While I do respect your scientific expertise I emphatically disagree. At worst, you might see horizontal smearing of bromide runs but I sincerely doubt it. And they certainly wouldn't be so linear and sharply defined. There is no question in my mind that the shutter is opening slightly on advance and fully closing after full advance. There simply is no other logical explanation.
Mike1234, I think you are mis reading the post.
I think we all agree, this cannot be bromide drag. It seems to be film movement during exposure.
Note that it seems that
1. The length of the "light streaks" are nearly the same no matter where they begin
2. They are unidirectional and do not radiate from the source
I suspect if the OP works backwards,
he will find that the "drag" direction is consistent with film advancment directon.
ie. the primary image preceedes the drag
However, I agree it is unusual that we see no other "ghost" images except from the light sources...
One expects them.
If the shutter were insufficiently opaque, ghosts might be avoided, but under ordinary conditions, I would expect more than just the light sources themselves to "drag".
Perhaps they are just in that "sweet spot" where only the light source is strong enough to record....
Mike;
I never said they would resemble what we see here. In fact, I say just the opposite.
They can be quite linear but not sharply defined. They look, in fact, just like the sideways bromide drag. In practice, any monodicrectional agitation method can cause drag, even diagonal if the agitation is appropriate to the resultant direction.
Bromide drag around sprocket holes can be circular in effect, surrounding the sprocket holes and overlapping into the image area.
PE
That does not look like classic bromide drag.
Bromide drag is more diffuse.
This is dark on the negative and light on the positive,
so the density goes the wrong way as well. PE
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