Canon T70 35mm SLR Camera Logo

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Anonymous Posted on Nov 06, 2013

All pictures have blue tint with T70 35mm SLR

Using fuji daylight 400speed film

1 Answer

Ric Donato

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  • Canon Expert 232 Answers
  • Posted on Nov 28, 2016
Ric Donato
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Silly question, is there a filter over the lens? Some folks when using use daylight film in tungsten lighting will 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 develop. The magic occurs during developing and printing.

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A

Anonymous

  • Posted on Dec 07, 2007

SOURCE: Rebel EOS Rebel SLR film camera-pictures develop like film was exposed

The shutter is most likely damaged.

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Can fujifilm brand film rolls be used in Canon TL 35mm SLR camera

You can use any brand of film in any camera, as long as it is the same size i.e 35mm. so yes absolutely
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My polaroid pictures are coming out blank?

I assume they are coming out almost completely white. Here are some guesses based on my experience with 4x5 Polaroid film from decades ago. Things may have changed.

First guess: This type of film has small packets of chemicals that are popped open and spread by rollers in the camera. These chemicals develop the film. If the pinch roller's no longer squeeze tightly enough, the film will come out white. Try googling your camera name and rollers to see if others have this problem.

Second guess: Another possibility is the film was not stored properly or expired. Have you tried replacing the film?

Third guess: Not likely, because I expect this camera is fully automatic, but are you able to adjust shutter speed or aperture? The images may be over exposed if shutter speed is slow. Are there mode settings like A, T and M? If so, put the camera into A mode. When you press the button do you hear a fast and immediate click-click, or do you hear a click followed by another click shortly after?
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My pictures have a purple tint to them

You're either using old/expired film, or taking photos during dusk. Color film is balanced for daylight photography. Using it under conditions other than that will result in varying color casts on the resulting images.

Fluorescent lighting: Greenish
Indoor bulbs: Reddish/orange
Outdoor at night/dusk: Blueish/purpla
Ourdoor at dawn: Pink/blue

Or, you may have just gotten bad print work done. Try a different lab.
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My indoor photos all have a greeninsh yellow effect

That's caused by lighting. More specifically by the type of lighting in use there. Every different type of light puts out a certain color range, some pink, some green, some yellow, some bluish.

How do you fix it?

1. use flash. Flash puts out a bluish light color balanced for daylight. Most film available today is color balanced for daylight. Problem here is that on camera flashes are weak and only reach about 10 feet. The rest of the picture will be greenish yellow. More powerful flashes extend that 10 feet based on the power they have, and may provide enough coverage. The reach of the flash is also determined by the film ASA.

2. use a filter on the lens. Get an FLD (flourescent-daylight) filter.

3. Scan the negs to digital and correct with Photoshop or another photo editing program.
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What iso of film im going to use...?

For outdoor pictures in daylight, I'd suggest ISO 200 film. Indoors, you may have to go to 400 or even 800.

There certainly is nothing wrong with Kodak films. If you're shooting slides, you might want to give the Fuji films a try, they tend to give much more saturated colors.
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Every picture I take comes out extremely bright especially in daylight

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 of film, increase the shutter speed, OR increase the f stop number. To find out if its the lab, take your negatives to a different lab and see if they turn out the same.
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When film is developed pictures are half solid black

If you are using a flash, than you shutter speed is too high for the shutter to fully open. if you are in daylight than your shutter is malfunctioning and needs repair
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Picture has a pink tint to it

Possibly you camera has a white balance setting (specifying whether you are taking picture in artificial light or in daylight) try to reset it by looking for it in the menu (you did not give a lot of details, I cannot help more...)
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Canon rebel k-2

Go into a darkened bedroom, dive under the thickest covers you can muster, with the camera. Open the camera back. You can now remove the cassette and unwind the film from the take-up spool (press the rewind button to free it) and wherever it has got caught up. Using the spindle on the cassette, wind the film back into the cassette. Now you can get out from under the covers and breathe again! Examine the camera mechanism to see if there's anything obviously untoward. Take it back to the camera shop & get them to check it out for you. If necessary, buy a cheap roll of film, put it through the camera until it jams (you can repeat this several times with the same roll if necessary). Then you can open the back in daylight & see what's going wrong - or, again, take it to the shop for help. They may want to send it for repair like that: if so send it with a note that the film is trashed & they can just open the back in daylight.
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