marcust101
Established
Hi all,
I have aslightly scary story to relate -
A work Collegue had decided to dedicate a couple of weeks to working with orphans of the surviours of the Chernobel disaster in early August. He wanted to take some pictures to document his trip and try and raise further money on his return.
He raised $4000 or so and went to Belarus to work with the orphans for a couple of weeks. He had asked me for a camera to use will there having liked the B&W's I had taken of a company outting recently. So I gave him 6 rolls of Delta 400 and a Yashica GSN, one lesson later and he was off.
Anyway the point of all this, He returned last weekend and I developed the film for him to find it entirely opaque, every last scrap of it.
He had been careful with the use of camera and it's fine, the film appears to have been fogged by background radition from his trip. Has anyone similar experience of this outside of airport X-ray machines? I wasn't aware it could be this invasive and allow people to live there long term.
Lesson here, use digital when near raditation hotspots
Incidentally the work he did was greatly appreciated and he plans to return later in the year despite the apparent radiation risk.
Sorry for the length of this thread but I felt worth relating.
Marcus
I have aslightly scary story to relate -
A work Collegue had decided to dedicate a couple of weeks to working with orphans of the surviours of the Chernobel disaster in early August. He wanted to take some pictures to document his trip and try and raise further money on his return.
He raised $4000 or so and went to Belarus to work with the orphans for a couple of weeks. He had asked me for a camera to use will there having liked the B&W's I had taken of a company outting recently. So I gave him 6 rolls of Delta 400 and a Yashica GSN, one lesson later and he was off.
Anyway the point of all this, He returned last weekend and I developed the film for him to find it entirely opaque, every last scrap of it.
He had been careful with the use of camera and it's fine, the film appears to have been fogged by background radition from his trip. Has anyone similar experience of this outside of airport X-ray machines? I wasn't aware it could be this invasive and allow people to live there long term.
Lesson here, use digital when near raditation hotspots
Incidentally the work he did was greatly appreciated and he plans to return later in the year despite the apparent radiation risk.
Sorry for the length of this thread but I felt worth relating.
Marcus