Ever wonder what your film will look like if you accidentally open the back of your camera? Well, here you go…
A Canon Elan7 with a 36 exposure 35mm roll of Lomo800 film was accidentally dropped 0n the 36th frame. The camera back opened up, exposing the film to bright sunlight. Yikes! It was quickly closed and rewound into the cartridge but light leaks were inevitable. Surprisingly, 75% of the roll had very usable images and most of the light leaks looked pretty cool!
If this happens to you, depending on where you are in the roll you’ll probably get some decent images. When developing your film at The Darkroom lab, if for some reason your roll produces zero images, we’ll issue you a blank roll voucher which can be used for future film development.
Below are all the frames from the roll of film exposed to light.
- Frame 1 – Not Affected
- Frame 2 – Not Affected
- Frame 3 – Not Affected
- Frame 4 – Not Effected
- Frame 5 – Not Affected
- Frame 6 – Tiny Light Leak (top right)
- Frame 7 – No Leaks
- Frame 8 – No Leaks
- Frame 9 – No Leaks
- Frame 10 – No Leaks
- Frame 11 – No Leaks
- Frame 12 – No Leaks
- Frame 13 – No Leaks
- Frame 14
- Frame 15
- Frame 16
- Frame 17
- Frame 18 – Very small leaks on each side
- Frame 19
- Frame 20
- Frame 21
- Frame 22
- Frame 23 – 1st Major Leak
- Frame 24 – No Leak, but the highlights seem more blown out than they should be.
- Frame 25 – Light leaks become very noticeable now
- Frame 26
- Frame 27
- Frame 28 – Last decent photo
- Frame 29
- Frame 30 These were the last frames with an image
- Frame 31 – The last 6 were completely blank