cayenne
Member
Hi all,
I've not shot my Yashica Mat 124G in a LONG time. I was going to pick it up to take out on the parade route for Mardi Gras tomorrow.
However, I don't know if it has film in it or not?!?!
I looked, the counter is on #2.
I dunno if I have film in it, or if last time I picked it up that I was just playing with the shutter, etc.....
Is there any way to tell if there is film in one of these to avoid opening up and potentially ruining a whole roll of film?
And is there a good way on this (and some other old cameras) to afix externally the type of film, like the flap of a box...to cameras in a better way that scotch tape? I've used that on a few cameras, but a. afraid it might start to pull up and mess up some of the old covering on these old cameras.
Back in the day, how did they keep up with what type/speed of film they had in a camera at any given time?
Anyway, I'm rambling....thank you in advance for any ideas to know if I've got film in it or not.
cayenne
I've not shot my Yashica Mat 124G in a LONG time. I was going to pick it up to take out on the parade route for Mardi Gras tomorrow.
However, I don't know if it has film in it or not?!?!
I looked, the counter is on #2.
I dunno if I have film in it, or if last time I picked it up that I was just playing with the shutter, etc.....
Is there any way to tell if there is film in one of these to avoid opening up and potentially ruining a whole roll of film?
And is there a good way on this (and some other old cameras) to afix externally the type of film, like the flap of a box...to cameras in a better way that scotch tape? I've used that on a few cameras, but a. afraid it might start to pull up and mess up some of the old covering on these old cameras.
Back in the day, how did they keep up with what type/speed of film they had in a camera at any given time?
Anyway, I'm rambling....thank you in advance for any ideas to know if I've got film in it or not.
cayenne