It can be very humid inside houses heated by fire and candles.

I never take it out of the camera when going from cold to hot and humid environments. There�s not much humidity inside the camera so it works OK. It�s like keeping the film in its box until it is warm after taking it from the freezer.

After going inside a warm house afterwards the LX was dripping wet. I kept my *istD safe inside the bag until I was sure it had room temperature again....

DagT


P� 2. jan. 2004 kl. 18.06 skrev Ryan Lee:


Hejsan Dag..What about any condensation? I'd imagine you're not living
somewhere as humid? There was noticeable moisture on the canister, but I
gave it a quick wipe, crossed my fingers and am hoping for the best..


Regards,
Ryan

----- Original Message -----
From: "Dag T" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, January 03, 2004 2:28 AM
Subject: Re: OT: Film refrigeration/ film loading


Right away.

In fact, when I took pictures of the fireworks on new years eve the
film was probably cooled down by 20 centigrades from the fridge
temperature :-)

DagT


P� 31. des. 2003 kl. 16.52 skrev Ryan Lee:


Just got a question which I hope doesn't sound too silly. If you store
35mm
film in the fridge (in a reasonably humid country), when taken out,
how long
would one normally wait before loading the camera? Has anyone here had
a bad
experience with condensation during the loading process? In a bit of a
rush
just now I may have hurried it..


Thanks,
Ryan











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