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Gabriel_Judet-Weinshel

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  1. But here's the tricky thing that I wasn't clear on in my initial post: all the daylight spools were NOT short-ends. Some had been sitting around in my fridge for months, but it WAS factory fresh. I ALWAYS look through the viewfinder to avoid fogging through the viewing system, too. It's possible that the fogged 100' daylight spool was part of a batch of unopened stock from a previous video shoot that was in sub-zero temperatures (Vermont in January, ridiculously cold). I can't imagine how damage to the film due to temperature would result in a 'fogged' look, but I'm really grasping at straws. Otherwise, I guess I have to assume the camera body was somehow not closed or taped properly. thanks so much! Gabriel
  2. Just got one of those dreaded calls from the lab telling me 100' from a 1000' music video shoot was totally fogged - 'totally' meaning the lab technician thought he was looking at black leader when he looked at my developed neg, not just characteristic end-of-reel edge fog that is par for the course on daylight spools, and uniformly fogged throughout the reel. He had to examine it under direct light to see that there was a vague image, but the chances of pulling something acceptable out of the neg in the telecine seems nill. I should mention I haven't shot with an Arri S (this was a rental) for awhile. Because this was a daylight spool, I wasn't using a 400' mag, just loading the daylight spool directly into the camera body. I am religious about taping the body for leaks. I was shooting 7274, rating it at its normal 200 speed, so even if there were a light leak, it's hard to imagine a leak fogging the film so thoroughly, but perhaps I'm wrong. Again, because it's a daylight spool, once the film was run through the camera body, there's no opportunity for such a complete fogging to occur (no changing bag). And the rest of the footage, shot on the same camera and in the same conditions, came out fine. The other possibility is bad film, which I haven't before experienced, so I'm unfamiliar with the symptoms. This 7274 did not all come from the same place at the same time. Some was purchased new directly before the shoot and some was short-ended from other projects. But the oldest of the film (which had been stored properly), wasn't older than eight months, and I've been told from techs at Kodak that you shouldn't really even start to worry until it's more than a year old. Any guesses?
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