...Could be one of two problems. Either you are letting too much light through the lens or, the lab you are using needs to balance their machine. To reduce the exposure you can buy a lower speed ...
...the black and white film may be in 2 varieties: traditional process black and white(not all labs can process this) and C-41 process black and white (and one hour lab can process this). If you ...
...is a 10mm camera right? Then the reason is roll has been exposed to light at some point. check your lab, they have exposed it to light, but if it happens again using a differnent lab then your camera ...
...loaded into the pick up spool and hence it was transported or exposed ; what you took to the lab was unexposed film. 2) the shutter is not opening and again no exposure takes place. To check ...
...on. If it is in the print then look at the negatives. Are they on there, if so check with your lab it may be a processing machine
purpla Ourdoor at dawn: Pink/blue Or, you may have just gotten bad print work done. Try a different lab
...use a blue filter. Is the film expired past a few years? If those are all no, then it may be your lab, my suggestion is to contact them. With film there is little to go wrong, you shoot they
...gone wrong?? Don't push too hard, the film sprocket holes will tear and make it difficult for the lab processor. No harm to the camera if you push too hard. How many exposures in the roll? 12, 24, ...
...I took some photos and there is a dark section (vertical) on 1/4th of the shot. It was daytime. The lab that developed them put "shutter lag" on the front of the photo packet. What can I do to make ...
...and white film, chemicals and paper. Otherwise, shoot black and white film and send it to a photo lab. If you're talking digital then you're in the wrong catagory here. This is film cameras only.
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