Drew B.
Member
you mean today?
yep, within the last hour.you mean today?
Guess what I just did?
so I'm out with my new mamiya c220, and decide to take off my sweatshirt because it's warming up.in the process of doing this I manage to twang off my 55mm lens that's worth as much as the camera itself and it lands in a puddle. now I have to figure out how to clear some water residue out of the inside elements of the lens.
I got rice inside the lens and had to send it out for repairs.1 week in uncooked rice should do the trick.
I got rice inside the lens and had to send it out for repairs.
More fun times...
Hey, I accidentally mislabeled a 4x5 film holder and developed an unexposed sheet back in march.Two days ago. Loaded two sheets of Adox CMS 20 together on the side of holder. The film base is a tad thinner than what I'm used to but not as thin as Rollei IR.
Hey, I accidentally mislabeled a 4x5 film holder and developed an unexposed sheet back in march.
That’s because your rice wasn’t gluten free.
Where do the free glutens go?
I did that once while pouring out the developer (also 120 vacation stuff), yet somehow got no serious light leaks...Well I haven't had that one happen for a while .......
I had four rolls of 120 to develop - 2 with one, normal N developing time and two with another, longer N + 1 developing time.
Loaded two rolls of each onto a single Paterson clone reel (as I frequently do) and put each loaded reel into its own 2x120 roll Paterson tank, with an empty spacer roll on top.
Marked each tank accordingly.
Planned out a workflow that would result in each set of rolls going through developer and stop bath separately, and then be combined (without spacer rolls) in one tank for fixing, rinse, HCA and washing steps. In essence, relying on the ability to expose the film to light after the stop bath (ala BTZS technique). I hadn't tried this before, so I was concentrating on the experiment.
Got everything set up, and started on the tank with the rolls for N + 1 developing.
The pre-rinse went in, and I put the tank on the rotary agitator for my usual 3 minutes - just like always.
I took the tank off the agitator, removed the cap for pouring, inverted the tank to empty it and the light-tight lid merrily popped off and into the sink, leaving the contents of the tank exposed to the light!
ARRGH!
I hurriedly re-attached the light-tight lid, double-checked that it was clicked in place properly - as I normally do every time, but obviously didn't do this time - and proceeded to finish my planned procedures for that and the other tank.
The result?
The film in the second tank is fine. The two rolls in the first tank both have edge fogging that protrudes into the image area at least a little bit. There are usable negatives there - my two recent uploads in the Photrio Gallery came from those rolls.
The message to take from this? If you are going to experiment, don't get distracted from those usual safeguards - like double-checking the seal on the tank - that you generally rely upon.
everybody can screw things up once in a while but, it takes me to make a real mess of things.there are countless threads on photography websites about beauty shots, the once in a lifetime
sunny 16 and the moon photographs, the everything worked great and look what i did negatives
and worked in the darkroom for 19 hours used up 40 sheets of film, but LOOK at THIS ! kind of stuff.
What was the last things you totally screwed up? maybe your shutter speed was off, your camera needed a cla
your aperture blades were oily and sticky, you rated your film wrong, you put the wrong film in your camera
you processed your film wrong ... or whatever.
not looking for how you saved the day, but what went wrong ...
I just tried mixing my own powder developer for the first time and I'm afraid I got dust particles in it because I didn't put my mixer in a bag.
We'll see what happens next.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |