and it was coated in sticky snow, what would you do to salvage the film?
(Not saying whether that actually happened this morning... ;-)
and it was coated in sticky snow, what would you do to salvage the film?
(Not saying whether that actually happened this morning... ;-)
I'd pull the darkslide all the way out and bow the film out of the rails when removing the film, in case it's wet, and then I'd leave the slide out for a few days berfore reloading in case the felt light trap got wet.
I'd dab the snow and water of with a Kleenex or some similar super absorbent stuff. Then I'd let it lay flat in a warm place until it's dry. Or maybe I'd just let the dog lick it.
This occasionally happens on film shoots, a camera falls into the water during a stunt, or otherwise. If the water is salt water, immediately put the camera and film mag into fresh water. Take the camera to a repair shop where they'll dry it out in the perscribed manner. The film should go into the darkroom still wet. In the dark, begin development as if nothing happened. Dry the holder with a towel. Let it air dry. Clean it of any lint and reload for the next adventure.
MW
Mark Woods
Large Format B&W
Cinematography Mentor at the American Film Institute
Past President of the Pasadena Society of Artists
Director of Photography
Pasadena, CA
www.markwoods.com
Seeing as I don't have a darkroom, I knocked the snow off and used a paper towel outdoors to get as much of the moisture off as possible, then brought it inside within a plastic bag so it could warm up, placing it vertically, flap side down so that any moisture would collect at the bottom, off the image area... now I will let it set in the open, indoors for a couple of days so everything evaporates in our dry winter interior climate.
How does that sound?
Sounds as good as letting the dog lick it. I'm sure your film will be fine.
is it worth your time trying to salvage? Personally I'd just shoot it as an experiment and move on to the next holder. Unless of course it's 8x10 or larger. then I'd change my tune.
Hey Frank,
I hope the emulsion wasn't wet, and if it was it doesn't touch any part of the film holder. My worry about your method is that the previously wet emulsion will stick to the film holder. Mark on. I'm enjoying your blog and images.
MW
Mark Woods
Large Format B&W
Cinematography Mentor at the American Film Institute
Past President of the Pasadena Society of Artists
Director of Photography
Pasadena, CA
www.markwoods.com
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