HuubL
hunter-gatherer
Developed another three films yesterday. One roll was exposed twice. That seems to happen more often recently.... Or, developing an empty film. Crease the slip after rewinding. I know, I usually do that.... 
Anybody has similar experiences?
Anybody has similar experiences?
Thardy
Veteran
I wind the leader all the way in for exposed rolls. Prevents me from using the roll again.
telemetre
Established
I used to come close to doing this a lot. After spending hours looking for usage marks on the films, I now fold the film leader back, mark the cassette with a pen, and always carry exposed and unexposed films seperately, saves a lot of time...
jke
Well-known
Wind the film leader all the way in. Leader out is convenient, but I just don't trust my memory basically. There are quite a few nice leader extractors out there if you are loading reels in a dark bag. If you're in a darkroom, then you can just crack the cassette with a bottle opener.
MartinP
Veteran
I'm sure everyone has made that mistake at some point, hopefully not often !
If you always cut a shaped leader, or use commercially loaded film, then simply ripping off the shaped part of the leader will indicate that it is used. If there is any exposure info (push/pull, flat light, contrasty etc etc) then you can write a small note on the tongue of film sticking out of the cassette.
For a quicker reload, by avoiding going through the five used rolls before getting to the unused one, it is also a good idea to keep the rolls/cassettes separately anyway, but the more chances one gets to correctly identify which roll is which, the better....
If you always cut a shaped leader, or use commercially loaded film, then simply ripping off the shaped part of the leader will indicate that it is used. If there is any exposure info (push/pull, flat light, contrasty etc etc) then you can write a small note on the tongue of film sticking out of the cassette.
For a quicker reload, by avoiding going through the five used rolls before getting to the unused one, it is also a good idea to keep the rolls/cassettes separately anyway, but the more chances one gets to correctly identify which roll is which, the better....
drewbarb
picnic like it's 1999
I put a piece of white tape on the base of my camera onto which I scribble notes with a sharpie about film stock loaded, EI used, date, etc. When I finish a roll, this gets wrapped around the film cassette for reference at processing and archiving. With the tape on, it's pretty tough to mistake it for a fresh roll. If I'm only shooting a partial roll, once downloaded, I write a note about the EI used and frame number on the leader itself- that way I can't miss it when re-loading the roll later. Both of these tricks keep me from double exposing shot film.
R
Roberto
Guest
I cut the shaped part of the leader.. like MartinP
Ronald M
Veteran
tear off the single perforation end or use my Swiss Army Knife.
With digital, it turn the cards face down in the wallet. Unused cards are face up.
Photography is all about disipline. If you don`t have it, find another hobby.
With digital, it turn the cards face down in the wallet. Unused cards are face up.
Photography is all about disipline. If you don`t have it, find another hobby.
Share: