Nor have I, still, the inner voice is warning that this canister may
not have been properly sealed/edge crimped and my would-be masterpiece
was light streaked beyond PS.
Sort of a "belt & suspenders" mentality.

Jack

--- Shel Belinkoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> It's probably a good idea to err on the side of caution, however, my
> own
> experience is that for almost 40 years I've been loading film in any
> kind
> of light, including bright sun, and have ~never~ suffered any
> problems with
> standard cassettes.  The light trap on the cassette does an admirable
> bob,
> and fogging has never occurred.  It's certainly hard to imagine any
> fogging
> or degradation going on through or past a couple of frames.  Just
> recently
> had a roll of HP-5 that had been sitting on my desk for more than a
> week
> processed.  It was not in its container.  No problem with light leak.
> 
> Shel 
> "You meet the nicest people with a Pentax" 
> 
> 
> 
> > On Nov 23, 2005, at 3:29 AM, Jack Davis wrote:
> >
> > > A way long time back, when virtually everything was B&W, the
> little
> > > yellow Kodak box and enclosed instructions, recommended the user
> "load
> > > the film in low light."
> >
> > These days it says "load in subdued light".  That might just be  
> > Fuji's version as I rarely shoot Kodak these days.
> >
> > I just face away from the sun and load the camera in my own shadow.
>   
> > Sometimes that's the only shade available.
> 
> 
> 
</t


                
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