OK, maybe revolutionary is too much. Everyone who's ever loaded 120 film onto a plastic reel has occasionally come upon a stubborn film.
With Jobo especially, "the art of the snips" is of great importance. You need to snip the corners of the leading edge of the 120, (and 35mm) so the film feeds smooth without snagging.
The best snip is a tiny slightly rounded snip. Too big and it makes matters worse.
This leads to old corner rounders for wallet prints for when people actually carried pictures, in their wallets of all places. Pictured below revolutionary tool for snipping tiny round corners. This is the greatest thing since Spenco gel saddles on mountain bikes. Use only the smallest setting makes about a 16th of an inch round snip.
With Jobo especially, "the art of the snips" is of great importance. You need to snip the corners of the leading edge of the 120, (and 35mm) so the film feeds smooth without snagging.
The best snip is a tiny slightly rounded snip. Too big and it makes matters worse.
This leads to old corner rounders for wallet prints for when people actually carried pictures, in their wallets of all places. Pictured below revolutionary tool for snipping tiny round corners. This is the greatest thing since Spenco gel saddles on mountain bikes. Use only the smallest setting makes about a 16th of an inch round snip.






