gb hill
Veteran
Spending a Morning & into the Late Night with Tom & Tuulikki here in NY
Thinking I am Shooting a Roll and realize the Next Day
there was No Film in the Camera... arghhhhh !!!!!
Memories only in Memory not in Film ;(
Now that had to really suck. Maybe next time carry the new X100.
Damaso
Photojournalist
Shooting with the lens cap on? Forgetting to bring film? Too many to think about...
kshapero
South Florida Man
That's easy and embarrassing. I was asked to shoot the 10th Anniversary Party for the TV Station Biography in 1992 using the dreaded Minolta 9000. The AF screwed up. Almost all my shots were blurred.
seakayaker1
Well-known
Keeping lens cap on and opening cameras with film in them.
+1
. . . . . being asked by a stranger on the street, after taking a few photographs, "do you realize that your cap is on?"
Also have opened the back of the camera prior to rewinding on a couple of occasions. Lesson learned is always rewind film immediately when the last frame is exposed.
Paul Luscher
Well-known
Shooting a certain English folk singer (who shall remain nameless) many years ago, in a small club. Using a Leica M3. I was sitting next to the stage. All of a sudden my viewfinder filled up with the wrathful figure of said folk singer headed straight my way and shrieking "No photographs! I can hear the shutter!"
And given the quietness of a Leica shutter, she must have had the ears of a bat to do so...
And given the quietness of a Leica shutter, she must have had the ears of a bat to do so...
Benjamin Marks
Veteran
I was photographing the opening of a bar/restaurant with a Pentax LX. I was betrayed by the "magic fingers" film-take up system. I got the sinking feeling in the party's second hour that the silky-smooth lack of tension on the film-advance lever was trying to tell me something . . .Arrrg! I break out into a sweat today even thinking about it.
oftheherd
Veteran
I was walking through the red light district in Amsterdam during a friend's stag night. I thought I was shooting quite discreetly with my camera at my hip. Unfortunately my camera at the time was a Sony digital that projected a red light straight into the face of an angry working woman behind a window. Heard a horrible shriek and some rough sounding Dutch words before my mates told me to get a move on as she picked up a bucket full of muck from next to her bed and began to chase me down the street. The angry mostly naked woman finally got close enough to empty out the bucket over my head on a crowded street. Needless to say my friends got some great photos of me covered in God knows what...
I salute you sir! You are a brave man. I would never tell such a story.
I can only hope... I'm not even sure what to hope for you.
chris00nj
Young Luddite
I was walking through the red light district in Amsterdam during a friend's stag night. I thought I was shooting quite discreetly with my camera at my hip. Unfortunately my camera at the time was a Sony digital that projected a red light straight into the face of an angry working woman behind a window. Heard a horrible shriek and some rough sounding Dutch words before my mates told me to get a move on as she picked up a bucket full of muck from next to her bed and began to chase me down the street. The angry mostly naked woman finally got close enough to empty out the bucket over my head on a crowded street. Needless to say my friends got some great photos of me covered in God knows what...
You win!
I don't think that was muck.
I think we all estimate how discreet (or sauve or strong) we could be after we've been drinking.
filmfan
Well-known
I was once standing on a beautiful beach with my last exposure ready from my last roll of film. The light was on its way to being perfect so I waited for the "golden hour" sunset with my girlfriend for 45 minutes in the freezing cold. During all this, I decided to let my girlfriend take the remaining frame in order to inspire her to stay out there with me. She put the strap of my Leica M6 around her neck, shutter cocked. I was in the process of describing to her how easy it is to accidentally fire the shutter with a soft-release trigger button installed (very important due to only having one frame remaining). When I pointed to the shutter with my frozen digit in an attempt to show her what I was talking about, I fired the shutter accidentally.
WINNING.
WINNING.
Michael Da Re
Well-known
I was on assignment covering a double homicide. I get there the CSU van is in front of this house So I start photographing the house. I get right across the street from it and grab a photo. I figure out 10 minutes later I photographed the wrong house and I was standing right in front of the actual crime scene house. I couldn't get anywhere near it again because the cops were keeping the line guarded after that. I guess I assumed since the cops were parked in front of that house that was the one and didn't even think of double checking the address. I also saw cops coming out of it but I guess they were just doing sweeping interviews. So frustrating. I felt like an idiot.
Another time I was photographing the Mayor's inauguration. They were saying they were going to let photographers up to the stage 3 at a time for 2 minutes to get photos during the ceremony. It turned into a huge screwup. When i got up there the front was littered with photographers. I couldn't get the angle I wanted and ended up doing a sort of crabbing belly crawl from one side of the stage to the other so I could get a shot without the podium in my way. After I was done I called my girlfriend and she goes "I saw you on TV dragging yourself on the ground."
I wouldn't be embarassed by this. I admire your dedication!!
intheviewfinder
Street
Giving photo tips to Irving Penn.
sykotec
Well-known
fortunately or unfortunately..... i've only got lens-cap stories. luckily nothing critical or irreplaceable, but still, embarrassing. not sure if it's worse when pointed out or possibly witnessed by known people or strangers.
gotta say it - loving the F5 without leader-out mod for soooo many reasons reading this! SLR makes the lens cap things pretty much impossible and out of focus real obvious, film load/advance is pretty much idiot-proofed (including a flashing red light!), and switching to a standard back from the MF-28 this week so I'll even have that little window to see the roll.
but yeah, the IIIf/Summitar makes prettier black and white pictures than the F5 and any 50 I've (so far) mounted.
gotta say it - loving the F5 without leader-out mod for soooo many reasons reading this! SLR makes the lens cap things pretty much impossible and out of focus real obvious, film load/advance is pretty much idiot-proofed (including a flashing red light!), and switching to a standard back from the MF-28 this week so I'll even have that little window to see the roll.
but yeah, the IIIf/Summitar makes prettier black and white pictures than the F5 and any 50 I've (so far) mounted.
dct
perpetual amateur
The day I retired my B35
The day I retired my B35
More than 10 years ago we were on a beautiful island in the North Sea (Amrum). We spent there two weeks. The second week I made my most photographs, with a Rollei B35. Well, I believed I did...
Look, unbelievable - I meant to my wife - it takes up to 38 images 
A few weeks later when I got back the developed roll I received only two prints: A normal image plus a second frame with all the remaining exposures on it.
All the nice images of the tidelands, the seagulls, my child, the ships and boats, the sea... All of this were exposed exactly on one frame, because the sprocket wheel didn't transport the film any longer. :bang:
This was the day I put my old B35 into a cabinet.
The day I retired my B35
More than 10 years ago we were on a beautiful island in the North Sea (Amrum). We spent there two weeks. The second week I made my most photographs, with a Rollei B35. Well, I believed I did...
A few weeks later when I got back the developed roll I received only two prints: A normal image plus a second frame with all the remaining exposures on it.
This was the day I put my old B35 into a cabinet.
peterm1
Veteran
The day I got back from a 3 week holiday in Melanesia - sailing and diving around the Solomon Islands and New Guinea with my brand spanking new Nikonos 5 underwater (and above water) camera. I had submitted a dozen or more 36 shot prepaid rolls of film for processing only to find I had not loaded the camera correctly. Not one roll turned out. Nada, zip zero.
The good thing is that this experience motivated me to go bakc and to do it all over again the next year. This time being very careful to read the manual first and be sure I knew how to load the camera properly.
The good thing is that this experience motivated me to go bakc and to do it all over again the next year. This time being very careful to read the manual first and be sure I knew how to load the camera properly.
Matus
Well-known
My very most embarrassing experience happen as I was photographing a dog waiting in front of a shop in one German city (I was just finishing a roll in my Mamiya 6). It looked kinda cute so I kneeled (to get lower view) at about 3 meters from it. As I was just tipping the shutter (the dog moved just fraction of a second before that) I heard YELLING and I mean YELLING from a lady irreversibly approaching middle age covered in too much make-up with strong far-east european accent (I can say that - I am form east Europe too
She was simply of "that kind"). It was all about "you have no right to photograph my dog ... it is my property ... you will not make money with photos of my dog ... I will call cops ... keep that camera out of my face ... I will call cops" with hysteric voice and she kept repeating all that stuff and she kept yelling at me - pretty much directly to my face. I really got stunned - it was something I really did not expect. People around were just starring as they did not know what was going one. I tried to reason with her at first but to no avail - so I was just standing there and starring at her for a few seconds. At some point I told her "go ahead and call the cops" but she was like a broken alarm. Finally I turned and walked away. It took me quite some time sitting in my car jut to put myself together. Until today I keep telling myself that I should have called the cops. I know I failed under this stress test, but at least nobody got physically harmed 
The dog ignored the whole situation (probably used to this behavior of it's mistress.
Sorry for a long post, but it had to go out. I still feel bad when I thing about this again.
I am going to make myself a tea ...
The dog ignored the whole situation (probably used to this behavior of it's mistress.
Sorry for a long post, but it had to go out. I still feel bad when I thing about this again.
I am going to make myself a tea ...
SimonSawSunlight
Simon Fabel
I once shot a client in a studio for 15 minutes without realising there was no cf card in the camera. I don't think they noticed, so it wasn't that bad. 
Richard G
Veteran
In the first ten years, never missed focus and never had the lens cap on as the reversed hood prevented aperture adjustment and the cap only went on the reversed hood. Very occasional lens cap on with non-Leica lenses, but still never an unfocused shot in 30 years. Until I got the M5. I was concentrating on the new match needle metering so much I would get back these unfocused shots as I had completely forgotten to focus. Even with this and the M6 I am leaving the lens cap on for a shot more than ever because of my 21 and 25 with accessory VFs and not using the camera VF. All of this is revealed in the negatives for the amusement of the guys who develop my film.
asfarley
Member
About a week ago, I started a thread asking for advice re: event photography.
At the event, I missed a speech by the CEO of Pratt & Whitney because my film wasn't loaded properly. Also, underexposed many shots due to the auto-mode flash bouncing off the projector screen. Also, cut off half the CEO in most of the "unveiling" photos. Also, wore loud boots and drew everyone's attention as I moved around the lecture hall during the speech for different angles. Also, turned the rewind knob the wrong way during part of a different speech so that it came unscrewed and fell apart (fortunately I had a backup body).
I feel like I'm at confession.
At the event, I missed a speech by the CEO of Pratt & Whitney because my film wasn't loaded properly. Also, underexposed many shots due to the auto-mode flash bouncing off the projector screen. Also, cut off half the CEO in most of the "unveiling" photos. Also, wore loud boots and drew everyone's attention as I moved around the lecture hall during the speech for different angles. Also, turned the rewind knob the wrong way during part of a different speech so that it came unscrewed and fell apart (fortunately I had a backup body).
I feel like I'm at confession.
Until I got the M5. I was concentrating on the new match needle metering so much I would get back these unfocused shots as I had completely forgotten to focus.
I did this with my M6 after using some AF P&S for a couple week stretch... felt ridiculous.
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