fraley
Beware of Claws
I'm looking for some advice on preventing fungus. Just recently I took a zoom lens out of the camera bag it's been stored in for months, and there's a white spiderweb fungus on an internal surface. It's 2-3mm across. This prompted me to check my dozen or so cameras and lenses. I found more fungus in the viewfinder of several rangefinders that normally are stored in their ever-ready cases. What's the best way to fight this?
I read on the PhotoEthnography site that sunlight prevents fungus, so I put all the cases aside and lined up the cameras on a bookself. I took the lens caps off all lenses. Is there anything else I can do? I live near the ocean in San Francisco. It's a temperate climate, usually not outside of a 40 to 90 degree fahrenheit range. There is some humidity; mold is a problem along the baseboard of some walls. Short of new duopane windows all around or a dry box for umpteen cameras, anything I should be doing? Do you store cameras in the case, or lenses with a cap on?
Thank you very much,
Michael
I read on the PhotoEthnography site that sunlight prevents fungus, so I put all the cases aside and lined up the cameras on a bookself. I took the lens caps off all lenses. Is there anything else I can do? I live near the ocean in San Francisco. It's a temperate climate, usually not outside of a 40 to 90 degree fahrenheit range. There is some humidity; mold is a problem along the baseboard of some walls. Short of new duopane windows all around or a dry box for umpteen cameras, anything I should be doing? Do you store cameras in the case, or lenses with a cap on?
Thank you very much,
Michael