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5 answers

1. While loading, you could misalign the sprocket holes and jam things up.

2. While unloading, you could forget to rewind the film first, causing the film to instantly and irreversibly overexpose - you'd lose all of the images.

3. While loading, your camera could come into contact with an anti-matter camera, causing your eyebrows to explode.

4. While loading film, dust and dirt could enter the body.

Take your pick ;-)

2007-02-16 10:27:21 · answer #1 · answered by OMG, I ♥ PONIES!!1 7 · 3 1

A couple of other, less common possibilities:
1. The film may not have been properly attached to the receiving side, period.
2. You'd know it if it happened, and it's only happened to me once, but there was a time where after a somewhat complex photoshoot, the film was torn clean out of the canister, making rewinding it back in impossible - at least after having exposed it to light checking to see why the rewinding felt so weird.

2007-02-16 10:53:03 · answer #2 · answered by STLEric 2 · 1 0

Loading: Not using a strip of film long enough to get to the receiving spool, using too long a strip or not setting the cartridge to engage the holders on the feeding side properly.

Unloading: Opening before rewinding, trying to rewind with virtually dead batteries and opening the back during rewinding.

2007-02-16 16:05:45 · answer #3 · answered by James Y 1 · 0 0

You don't catch the film leader correctly, by attaching and clicking two frames.
After closing back and insuring it's locked.
Next take up slack on rewind knob.
Take a test shot or two and if rewind knob turned while shooting and advancing the two shots, your cool, until you make sure the film speed is right.

2007-02-16 13:00:34 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Rewinding film to fast in the cold, could cause static electricity making marks on the film looking like small lighting bolts.

You could put the film in upside down and all your prints will be upside down.

and watch out for the anti- matter.

2007-02-16 18:56:52 · answer #5 · answered by Brian Ramsey 6 · 0 0

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