I am looking a series of WWII German photos to purchase and multiple photos have the same white lines or scratches on the images. If these scratches existed on the original negatives then why would they all be in the same size/location on different prints? Does this point to post war production? Thanks.
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I think the short answer, as I suggest your intuition is telling you, is they probably wouldn't be in the same place...certainly not exactly the same place. Do you have pics you may display for a better assessment?Cheers, Steve
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"Next to a battle lost, the saddest thing is a battle won." Arthur Wellesley — Duke of Wellington
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I have seen some like this and they were post war reproductions.so it may be the same for this lot.can u put a photo up so i can have a look..if the white lines are all in the same place i think that is not right.as i have lots of photos from one person and they have white lines but not one is in the same place..
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Originally posted by Simon Orchard View PostIf you're saying different photographs have the same pattern of scratches then yes that's a red flag.
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Let me post my opinion;
If there are verticle lines, the same width/severity on a small group, or a large number photos, that most likely means that all of those photos were taken with the same camera. The camera had some type of debris or an imperfection that caused the film to become scratched as it was rolled from one side to the other, within the camera. i.e. the emulsion was scratched.
If it was just dust or debris, it probably would not continue to affect succeeding rolls, unless it were a subborn piece, really stuck. If it were a camera flaw, all rolls would get damaged, and all photos takjen with this camera would have the same exact verticle scratches....until the camera were repaired. Also, it could also be the above mentioned problems affecting only the metal housing of the roll of film,. i.e. dents, debebis, or other factors
If this was noit clear let me know and I will explain better.
John Pen.Last edited by John Pen.; 11-18-2009, 02:17 PM.
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Originally posted by John Pen. View PostLet me post my opinion;
If there are verticle lines, the same width/severity on a small group, or a large number photos, that most likely means that all of those photos were taken with the same camera. The camera had some type of debris or an imperfection that caused the film to become scratched as it was rolled from one side to the other, within the camera. i.e. the emulsion was scratched.
If it was just dust or debris, it probably would not continue to affect succeeding rolls, unless it were a subborn piece, really stuck. If it were a camera flaw, all rolls would get damaged, and all photos takjen with this camera would have the same exact verticle scratches....until the camera were repaired. Also, it could also be the above mentioned problems affecting only the metal housing of the roll of film,. i.e. dents, debebis, or other factors
If this was noit clear let me know and I will explain better.
John Pen.
Mike
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I have seen a number of photos with scratches from scratched negatives due to debris which actually scratched the negatives as they were wound. These are often Afrika Korps or eastern front photos where there were also many dusty areas. These scratches tend to be uniform and the same on almost all photos from a roll.
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Originally posted by John Pen. View PostLet me post my opinion;
If there are verticle lines, the same width/severity on a small group, or a large number photos, that most likely means that all of those photos were taken with the same camera. The camera had some type of debris or an imperfection that caused the film to become scratched as it was rolled from one side to the other, within the camera. i.e. the emulsion was scratched.
If it was just dust or debris, it probably would not continue to affect succeeding rolls, unless it were a subborn piece, really stuck. If it were a camera flaw, all rolls would get damaged, and all photos takjen with this camera would have the same exact verticle scratches....until the camera were repaired. Also, it could also be the above mentioned problems affecting only the metal housing of the roll of film,. i.e. dents, debebis, or other factors
If this was noit clear let me know and I will explain better.
John Pen.
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