No - not unless you are so violent as to damage all that protective material.
Here's an example of results from film that experienced a lot more shaking than that:
I have another absurd question that seems common sense but need reassurance from some opinions, does shaking the film canister that has exposed film inside of the film canister which is also inside of the plastic opaque container have a potential of ruining your film? Thank you!
That's why they call it latent. It's not fixed yet.But I like the idea of the latent image falling off the film.
But I like the idea of the latent image falling off the film.
With digital, those 1 and 0 bits fall into the bit bucket, lost forever.Yes, if one shakes the film too hard or drops it from great heights the latent image will just slide off the film and leak out of the roll of film. I heard that it can happen to digital photographs too. That is why one should never drop a film or digital camera.
With digital, those 1 and 0 bits fall into the bit bucket, lost forever.
I have met a few people who thought shaking or dropping a roll of film would blur or otherwise mess-up the images. Obviously they don't know how film works, but I don't think that alone is where it comes from. I believe someone somewhere started that as a joke, which led people who don't know about it to ask. Asking is far better than assuming.
If I had a special "sarcasm alert" flag, I would attach it to a bunch of posts in this thread!
I like these questions from those who are new to film. They remind us about how much knowledge we tend to assume to be generally understood.
Typically today we call the casing whith a spool that holds the film cassette.
And the plastic container with plastic cap canister.
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