To move this to even more absurd, bathrooms are one room in the house
where lots of skin "flakes" are shed, actually. People brush their
hair, shave, wash skin, and remove their clothes there. A good deal of
"scratching" occurs in bathrooms also. ;-)
Art
B.Rumary wrote:
In [EMAIL
Clark Guy wrote:
HI, Tim!
If you have a stand-up shower stall in your home, you might try
using that as a place to hang your negatives.
Static build-up is reduced in higher humidity locations. This reduces
dust attraction to plastic surfaces. Also, most bathrooms are
In [EMAIL PROTECTED], Arthur Entlich wrote:
Static build-up is reduced in higher humidity locations. This reduces
dust attraction to plastic surfaces. Also, most bathrooms are not
carpeted, and do not have flocked wallpaper or textured ceilings, all
dust attracters.
Also people don't
HI, Tim!
If you have a stand-up shower stall in your home, you might try
using that as a place to hang your negatives. I have had a great deal of
dust problems in the half a year or so of film scanning I've done, with both
professionally developed color film and my home
From: Clark Guy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2001 8:03 AM
Subject: filmscanners: DUST (was Scratched Negs Home C-41 processing)
HI, Tim!
If you have a stand-up shower stall in your home, you might try
using that as a place to hang your negatives. I
-
From: Gerry Kaslowski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2001 5:33 PM
Subject: Re: filmscanners: DUST (was Scratched Negs Home
C-41 processing)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: filmscanners: DUST (was Scratched Negs Home C-41
processing)
One small addition..If you run the shower a short time before you dry
your film, the dust seems to get stuck down, and you have even less of a
problem,
From: Clark Guy [EMAIL PROTECTED