Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/05/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ted, thanks for the response. I always carry my film in ziploc bags, clearly labeled as film, always arrive early at any airport and politely ask for a hand check. This has worked for ten years now since 9/11. Sometimes, they swab each and ever canister, sometimes they just open up a few random rolls. At Dublin, I never lost my temper but resolutely refused to have my film scanned. I politely told them what every other airport in the world does as far as procedure but they insisted that they would have to pull out a foot or two of the film from each roll to ensure that it was indeed film. As far as digital, for most of my paying gigs, I do shoot digital. But truth be told I am a better film shooter. This phenomenon might only happen to me but when I shoot a digital image, I fire off several shots of a subject or a moment, confident that I have gotten the shot. When I shoot film, I treat every frame a bit more preciously and carefully choose my moments. So I really am a better more careful shooter with film. If I shoot a great shot on digital, my first thought is that I wish it had been on film. I love everything about film. I love to see a proof sheet and see my progression through an idea, grimace when my exposure was off for a shot, the smell of emulsion from a roll fresh from the box, the magic of the darkroom, watching images appear out of nothing. The lag time between wandering a strange city and receiving a proof sheet weeks afterwards, the pure process of shooting and not seeing the results. I shoot for a print wherever I am. When I shoot digital, the end result is a monitor for a Lightroom gallery or Facebook. So few of my clients ever print out their images and if they do, it is at Target. It is a digital world and digital photography is great and amazing. But for me, my true place in the world is to be someplace new with any camera and a pocketful of film. Doug Kim o 646.602.7603 c 310.869.0498 -- http://www.ricecracker.net http://www.bornyogis.com On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 8:36 PM, <tedgrant at shaw.ca> wrote: > doug kim OFFERED: > Subject: Re: [Leica] Security in Dublin Airport now insist on scanning film > > Gee Doug, > Did they scan your digital cameras also???????? > > Given airports have been scanning film for umpteen dozen years by now and > like you in the beginning I got ticked off because there were no easy > tricks or words to not having film scanned. HOWEVER????? > > My good fortune was, I put all the film on the way out and back from > assignments in clear plastic zip lock bags out of the little yellow boxes > so it could be seen. Then walked up to the scanner guys and handed them the > film asking quite politely... "This is very sensitive 800 / 1600 film, does > it really have to go through the scanner?" And in a great number of cases > the security guy just shook the bag, looked at the rolls and passed them to > the other side without going through the machine. > > Quite honestly I didn't always win! But I always kept my cool, walked > through without saying another word and picked up my rolls. Some times it > might be several hundred rolls in a few bags. By the same token the Gods > were with me and I never had any film fogged going through the dozens of > airport locations over the years I was travelling on assignments. However, > I accepted that was the world plan like it or not. And certainly don't > start whining and bitching because in 99.9% of the time they are going to > be the winners and you will get your ass fried! > > Besides by now, given the years digital cameras have been out and many > professional photographers working only in B&W make fabulous B&W prints > from digital images. I'm quite surprised you are not shooting digital? > You'd never have a worry again about scanning. Besides if I were in the > security business I'd be far more suspicious of a "Film carrying guy > today?" Than a guy carrying a half dozen digital cameras. > > Any thoughts on this approach? > > cheers, > Dr. ted > > > > ______________________________**_________________ > Leica Users Group. > See > http://leica-users.org/**mailman/listinfo/lug<http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug>for > more information >