Pre-exposing film

I’ve been looking at the Lomo Sprocket Rocket as a tool to this madness �� but the rewind would be better served if it had a crank, instead of a knob. Think the knob would be too slow at rewinding, for me at least.

Do you really need a camera for that? Just use a second film canister and wind the film into it. You can control the exposure with the distance between both film canisters (slit width) and the distance of the pre-flash source from the film. Making a "rewind lever" for the take-up canister that would allow for a reasonably stable speed of rewinding shouldn't be too hard...
 
Do you really need a camera for that? Just use a second film canister and wind the film into it. You can control the exposure with the distance between both film canisters (slit width) and the distance of the pre-flash source from the film. Making a "rewind lever" for the take-up canister that would allow for a reasonably stable speed of rewinding shouldn't be too hard...
Sounds like a darkroom job and a really dim monitor as a light light source.

BTW, I’d like to know how Revolog and Doubble film do it.
 
It may come to that in the end (will there every be an end? I can hear the collective RFF membership screaming!).
I’ve been looking at the Lomo Sprocket Rocket as a tool to this madness 😂 but the rewind would be better served if it had a crank, instead of a knob. Think the knob would be too slow at rewinding, for me at least.


My post, which you posted this in response to, was about pre-exposing frame by frame.
 
I learned from a pro 50 years ago to post expose. Hang the film in your dark room with a very small bulb and enlarger timer set to .10 sec or 1/2 , I forget.

He did weddings and pics were superb.

You will never wind evenly enough. To find exposure, flash just enough to see fog compared to space between frames, then cut 1 stop. Then do the same with real film.

Keep the light 10 feet away to minimize exposure difference from mid roll to ends.
 
My post, which you posted this in response to, was about pre-exposing frame by frame.

Everyone has their own preferred method after experimentation. But I am inclined to think your method is the one with the most advantages. You are controlling your photos one frame at a time so more control I would think. Someone mentioned a dim TV.

I think one can work with that idea of less exposure and get better photos; or at least know which will give you what you want with different photo opportunities. And if you are outside, the sky or grass or whatever has a color you would like to tint your photo with. Another reason one might prefer one exposure at a time.

If you still wish to expose an entire roll, a blank room, light, one color wall, and flash will work too.

Again, everyone has to experiment to get what they like. I never tried exposing a whole roll first, only a frame at time. I did that very seldom. It worked well sometimes and many times left me wondering what in the world I thought I was doing.

Of course, the OP may disagree.
 
How about getting a camera that has a removable door (Nikon FE, FA, FM series, F2, F3, etc, other manufacturers' models) and find a donor door which you could cut a slit into. When you finish a roll, stick the camera in a changing bag, swap the door, pull it out of the bag, then rewind and flash it like you want.
If you want a really consistent way to flash film, find a Bell and Howell 71 Filmo, remove the shutter blind and run the roll through that. It will pull a 36 exposure roll through in a couple seconds. This method would guarantee even exposure better than any other method, aside from a purpose-built drive.
Phil Forrest
 
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