Photography Asked by Bryan Carter on July 9, 2021
I recently ran a roll of Kodak 400TX through an OM10. Some of the roll appeared to be fine but many of the images showed vertical light leaks – the attached is the best(worst) example of this. Any ideas as to where the leaks may be coming from?
Bryan
Because the light comes from the top of the picture, it is leaking in from the bottom of the camera (unless you were holding the camera upside down in which case the leak is at the top of the camera). It is not coming through the viewfinder (because the viewfinder is at the top of the camera)[1]. As mentioned, the most probable fix is replacing the light seals. There is probably a Youtube video that will help you do it yourself if you don't want to pay someone to do it.
[1]: unless you were holding the camera upside down.
Answered by Bob Macaroni McStevens on July 9, 2021
Look at the film via black light. Do you see darker streaks stemming from film sprocket holes? Could be caused by improper loading or unloading of film or improper developing.
Anyway, to rule out camera light leak, procure a tiny keychain flashlight that stays on when switched. Insert lighted flash light into camera and close the back. Now retire to fully dark darkroom. Sit with the camera a minimum of 20 minutes, This time allows time for your eyes to dark adapt. Look at the camera from all angles. Light that leaks in, also leaks out.
Answered by Alan Marcus on July 9, 2021
I am looking closely at the image. There is a solid and consistent vertical bar on the right side. It does not vary in width or intensity from top to bottom. That looks like a sluggish shutter curtain - OR - It may be from a processing reel. The light leaks also look more like a processing issue than a film door issue. Did you process the film yourself?
Answered by user85781 on July 9, 2021
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