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Photography Q&A
"Automagic" ISO setting on a DSLR
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<blockquote data-quote="taylorkh" data-source="post: 676622" data-attributes="member: 44240"><p>ThanksChucktin,</p><p></p><p>I recall some folk saying in the old days that you had to store color film for a certain number of months before it was at its best. </p><p></p><p>Speaking of fog... there is the classic case of Kodak's fogged sheet film back in the late '50s or early '60s. The Kepner-Tregoe problem solving methodology used that as one of their case studies. I recall taking a K-T course MANY years ago. The instructor described the symptoms - Kodak was receiving complaints about high end sheet film being fogged right out of the package. We the students were supposed to apply the K-T process to solve the problem. </p><p></p><p>As it turns out there was a chemist and rather remarkable character in the class. He said before we even started "I bet it's the separator paper between the sheets." This of course WAS the cause - residue from some chemical used in bleaching the paper interacted with the film. Blew that example/exercise out of the water. Turns out the chemist was an avid photographer and had been involved in investigating the Kodak paper fiasco.</p><p></p><p>Ken</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="taylorkh, post: 676622, member: 44240"] ThanksChucktin, I recall some folk saying in the old days that you had to store color film for a certain number of months before it was at its best. Speaking of fog... there is the classic case of Kodak's fogged sheet film back in the late '50s or early '60s. The Kepner-Tregoe problem solving methodology used that as one of their case studies. I recall taking a K-T course MANY years ago. The instructor described the symptoms - Kodak was receiving complaints about high end sheet film being fogged right out of the package. We the students were supposed to apply the K-T process to solve the problem. As it turns out there was a chemist and rather remarkable character in the class. He said before we even started "I bet it's the separator paper between the sheets." This of course WAS the cause - residue from some chemical used in bleaching the paper interacted with the film. Blew that example/exercise out of the water. Turns out the chemist was an avid photographer and had been involved in investigating the Kodak paper fiasco. Ken [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
"Automagic" ISO setting on a DSLR
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