Keeping track of films in cameras

CharlesDA, the piece of string was one chain long.


Good joke but could you do it in metric for our EU friends, please?

Edit, seconds later; just realised it would be like giving your weight in stones and pounds. They'd fall about laughing at our primitive ways...



Regards, David
 
I keep a simple ASCII text file listed by film size:

Film in Cameras
---------------
35mm:
Nikon FM2 (empty)
Leica M6 (empty)
Argus C3 (Kodak UC 400) or Portra?
Leica IIIf RD (empty)
Leica IIIf RDST (empty)
Leica M2 (empty)
Leica AF-C1 (empty)
Kodak Retina Reflex III (Kodak Portra 400) - finished - sent to Old School Photo Lab
Zeiss Ikon Contessa (Fujifilm Superia X-tra Walmart 400 ASA 24Exp.) - finished - sent to Old School Photo Lab
Zeiss Ikon Contaflex (empty)
Zeiss Ikon Contina-matic III (empty)
Kodak Retina IIa (Kodak Ektar 100 Color) March 10, 2019

120:
Rolleicord Vb (empty)
Mamiya RB67 Pro-SD (empty)
Zero Image Pinhole (empty)

4x5:
Kevin Finney 4x5 (Pinhole/Zone Plate)
Robert Rigby 4x5 (Pinhole)
 
I think a few of us have been in that situation, too many cameras loaded and a failing memory, what have l put in that camera, it has got worse as l have got older
 
Label-L.jpg


And you can write on the back of the card the date the film went in etc. etc...

Regards, David


cool idea, l like that a lot
 
I use the low acid artist tape labeled with BW or C and the ISO of the film. Got the idea from f16sunshine.


I bulk load 35mm a lot so no boxes for that. And my 120 cameras don't have a place for the box end.


Steve W
 
My concern...how long do these free apps last until they disappear without warning.

If you are worried about that you could run a report daily. Or everytime you load a camera. If the site goes belly up, what's the deal? You'll be back to doing what you did before. Wondering what's in your camera.
 
One of the tabs is labelled Reports. You can run and download reports on anything that you care to imagine using the data that you have input. Film type, subject, exposure, camera,lens, project , date etc etc.
You can do that on a daily basis (hourly if you want!) so you can have all your data elsewhere in case of a failure/outage.

It really is a fantastic and free tool. And so so so much better than putting some sticky paper on your camera and writing tri-x on it..

It is interesting to me that people use their computers to come to the internet to go to a website to ask for a solution. Everyone responding obviously has tech smarts as that is why they are able to do that. But the solution for most is something from the 18th century..


But I don't haul my computer around with me when taking photographs. Or a "smart phone" for that matter. Besides, the spiral bound notepad is just like my M4-P, battery free. :D


PF
 
FWIW I either use C200 or else FP4+ and so a glance at the film speed set on the camera's meter tells me what film is in it. The film carton side was used because one of my cameras (Olympus XA1) only takes 400 or 100 ISO film and so was the exception.

I also use the film carton side for non metered cameras or else stick a bit of paper with " C200" etc on it in the hot shoe.

As farlymac says those little notebooks are ideal and you can buy a half dozen of them for a single coin*...


Regards, David


* Meaning a pound or dirt cheap in England.
 
But I don't haul my computer around with me when taking photographs. Or a "smart phone" for that matter. Besides, the spiral bound notepad is just like my M4-P, battery free. :D


PF

You must be the one person in the northern hemisphere that doesnt take his phone with him..
;)



Following not directed at you Farleymac:

Aaaaand... you can just take a screen grab anytime you want if 'you' live in that fear of what if the site DISAPPEARS!!! cuz photographic life as we know it will come to an end if that happens.

Works for me as I have multiple cameras with multiple types of film in them at any given moment. I shoot a lot. About 5-10 rolls a week. If 'you' load your camera in February, finish the film in September then this need not be necessary. Using your camera may though.
;)
 
Back
Top Bottom