BradS
Member
mind blown!
Well, that would tie in with the concept of light bulbs actually being Dark Suckers. It only stands to reason that if they consume dark, they have the potential to leak it.
Yeah but I didn't see a light bulb in my Fuji when I opened it. Should I be looking somewhere else? Where else could I have got the dark leak from?
Well, that would tie in with the concept of light bulbs actually being Dark Suckers. It only stands to reason that if they consume dark, they have the potential to leak it.
Scanned with a digicam, so essentially it is photographed. A piece of dust would show as a white spot.
In that case, I'd suspect either a drying mark (likely interlayer) or an artefact from the use of a monobath. The mark is discontinuous?
Might also be some artifact of the light used to illuminate the negative for digital imaging.
No the mark/line is continuous across the entire roll.
It only appeared on this roll, none before, no rolls (different films) after.
In that case, I'd be more inclined to suspect a manufacturing issue. Did you run any 220 through the Fuji after this roll?
You could tape a strip of 120 backing to the 120 side of the pressure plate. Yep, still flawed, but if it elminates the problem, you'll know to look at the pressure plate specifically...
Either way, I'll find out when I shoot the next roll of GPX in a different camera.
Did the film come tightly rolled and became fat when placed in both cameras or did it arrive fat rolled? If the latter then maybe this tends to support what was being speculated on, namely, that these rolls may be made up by hand to a very large extent.3. The film seems to be susceptible to fat rolling. My roll in the GW690III was not as tight a I would have liked even though I was very careful loading it as that camera is touchy in that respect. But luckily no light leaks. The roll in my Hasselblad H1 had the same issues - and that is a camera that has auto loading and I have never had any fat rolls in it. Will see if there are any light leaks when I scan it.
1. The backing paper really does stink. Intense moth balls smell. A little disconcerting.
2. The backing paper is surprisingly hard to remove from the film from both ends when loading the film onto a reel.
That sounds a lot like the paper hasn't fully finished being allowed to outgas after printing - which will depend on the volatility of the solvents used. By 'difficult to remove from the film', do you mean difficult to unstick the tape?
Did the film come tightly rolled and became fat when placed in both cameras or did it arrive fat rolled? If the latter then maybe this tends to support what was being speculated on, namely, that these rolls may be made up by hand to a very large extent.
Thanks
pentaxuser
Thanks, Huss. It does all suggest that the 220 may very well be rolled in the dark by hand using a small team of operators As long as there are no light leaks and the rolls are OK in the camera then it matters not as far as I can see
pentaxuser
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