Nobody told me it was mined and loaded with potholes. 
Having just developed my most recent 4x5 negatives it got me thinking about my "trip" thus far.
My first negatives we so terribly laden with lint and dust it was funny. This was my very first lesson learned. It looked more like some sort of biological specimen slide.
Then there was.. Oh, heck, I'll just list them.
* Forgetting to close the preview shutter
* Forgetting to cock the shutter
* Forgetting to pull the dark slide [looks around quickly and makes believe it was a test firing
]
* Most recently, on a close-up, I was proud of myself for noticing the sides of a can in the pic were not parallel and corrected it with some tilt. I stopped patting myself on the back after developing the neg and noticing I had clipped a part of the scene on the bottom [note to self, go all the way around with the loupe next time].
* Oh, forgot one, not shoving the holder in all the way. Turned 4x5 pics into large, square format. Thanks to folks here, that problem was diagnosed pretty quickly.
So, what's left?

Having just developed my most recent 4x5 negatives it got me thinking about my "trip" thus far.
My first negatives we so terribly laden with lint and dust it was funny. This was my very first lesson learned. It looked more like some sort of biological specimen slide.
Then there was.. Oh, heck, I'll just list them.
* Forgetting to close the preview shutter
* Forgetting to cock the shutter
* Forgetting to pull the dark slide [looks around quickly and makes believe it was a test firing
]* Most recently, on a close-up, I was proud of myself for noticing the sides of a can in the pic were not parallel and corrected it with some tilt. I stopped patting myself on the back after developing the neg and noticing I had clipped a part of the scene on the bottom [note to self, go all the way around with the loupe next time].
* Oh, forgot one, not shoving the holder in all the way. Turned 4x5 pics into large, square format. Thanks to folks here, that problem was diagnosed pretty quickly.
So, what's left?


