flip
良かったね!
I am sometimes intrigued by the shots at the start of the roll where the film was partially exposed and only half a shot was achieved. For example:
Regardless of the lackings of the shot, the burning at the edge actually made for a nice place to scrawl a note to friends. I am curious if you have had some results where this was effective in some way or other.

Regardless of the lackings of the shot, the burning at the edge actually made for a nice place to scrawl a note to friends. I am curious if you have had some results where this was effective in some way or other.
charjohncarter
Veteran
Cropped out light leak:

nico
Well-known
flip
良かったね!
I like how the exposed area appears to be the light source on the last shot.
tomalophicon
Well-known
There's a little black goat on the right... And the top of a cute little piglet...
I was leaning right over the fence of the little zoo and couldn't look in the viewfinder.
Age old Delta 100 and Kodak Retinette.
Edit: whoops, not really effective, more annoying. A little bit intriguing maybe.
I was leaning right over the fence of the little zoo and couldn't look in the viewfinder.
Age old Delta 100 and Kodak Retinette.
Edit: whoops, not really effective, more annoying. A little bit intriguing maybe.
Jack917
Established
I like the shot, but also wonder what it'd be like if I had the whole frame

le vrai rdu
Well-known
It is called , at least here, picture n° 0 
xwhatsit
Well-known
Picture № 00 or even X if you load in a changing bag!It is called , at least here, picture n° 0![]()
xwhatsit
Well-known
This isn't quite the same thing, but a horrendous time trying to get some Efke KB25 on to the plastic developing reel lead to this frame. The humidity inside the changing bag meant the emulsion swelled up (KB25 seems to be a gooey sort of film at the best of times) and it simply jammed on the reel after a while. After many attempts I thought I had it loading but in fact it was overlapping itself multiple times with the film touching itself.
The black lower-left corner is undeveloped/unfixed emulsion. The bright right-hand side is -- I think -- overdeveloped film because the stop bath never reached it properly.
The black lower-left corner is undeveloped/unfixed emulsion. The bright right-hand side is -- I think -- overdeveloped film because the stop bath never reached it properly.

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