If you have 2 fun negatives touching each other, eventually they’ll stick together and even fuse making them very difficult to keep. It’s recommended not to have them touch. the way I do it, personally, is by cutting them in 4s keeping the excess film. I then use continuous sleeves that I can tear off to a desired length and then put that in a plastic wallet, and then a folder. All in all good video tho! Very helpful!!
If it’s film I use the month and year and date of development- I title the subject as I archived the scanned catalogued digital folder- film type, lens, camera.
i always store them in KENRO paper sleeves, in a cardboard negatives folder/box , never had a aproblem with the paper i always thought in my own head that its more gentle with the negatives but i have no proof of it. thoughts on the paper sleeves? cheers
The only problem with plastic is that it will trap moisture inside and depending on your negatives the emulsion will fuse and transfer to the sleeves , so you'll loose parts of your images
"i find that the best way to store film is the chronological order" and prints a label "10/11/21" :) which can be interpreted as 2010-11-21, 2021-10-11 or 2021-11-10 😂the only reasonable format is yyyy-mm-dd since it follows a logical progression from largest to smallest unit (year - month - day) and it's international standard
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very very much appreciate the no nonsense approach. Straight to the point and very informative. 10/10
If you have 2 fun negatives touching each other, eventually they’ll stick together and even fuse making them very difficult to keep.
It’s recommended not to have them touch. the way I do it, personally, is by cutting them in 4s keeping the excess film. I then use continuous sleeves that I can tear off to a desired length and then put that in a plastic wallet, and then a folder.
All in all good video tho! Very helpful!!
great video mate!
Thanks very clear, to the point and helpful
Thank you!
If it’s film I use the month and year and date of development- I title the subject as I archived the scanned catalogued digital folder- film type, lens, camera.
Good system
great video, thank you kindly
Very welcome
i always store them in KENRO paper sleeves, in a cardboard negatives folder/box , never had a aproblem with the paper i always thought in my own head that its more gentle with the negatives but i have no proof of it. thoughts on the paper sleeves? cheers
Good video
Nice 🙏🙏👍
Thank you!
The only problem with plastic is that it will trap moisture inside and depending on your negatives the emulsion will fuse and transfer to the sleeves , so you'll loose parts of your images
"i find that the best way to store film is the chronological order" and prints a label "10/11/21" :) which can be interpreted as 2010-11-21, 2021-10-11 or 2021-11-10 😂the only reasonable format is yyyy-mm-dd since it follows a logical progression from largest to smallest unit (year - month - day) and it's international standard