Thursday, December 15, 2011

What happens if you switch your lens but you have a film in the camera?

What happens if you switch your lens but you have a film in the camera??





I have a AE-1 Canon Film Camera, it is for my phtograghy class.





And I switched lens but there was film in there will it ruin the whole film or will it be fine.





Please help|||You're absolutely fine.





35mm SLR camera are designed for switching lenses while the film is loaded. Otherwise, photographers would have to shoot an entire roll with one lens.





Between the exterior light that might damage the film, you'll find a mirror, that flips up just before exposure, and the camera's shutter, which is closed immediately after the previous picture is taken.|||When you remove the lens, you can see the mirror. It will reflect the image so you can see it in the viewfinder. When you press the shutter, the mirror flips up, the viewfinder goes blind and the film is exposed to light. That's the principle of SLR cameras and also the reason the film is not affected when you remove the lens: It is protected against light by the mirror.|||Aunsoft video converte can help you convert canon camera video to almost all of video formats you need ,and it can do this :


Support importing 1080p, 720p AVCHD camcorder videos


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http://www.aunsoft.com/mts-converter/|||In most modern hardware you can remove the lens without removing the shutter, so your film should be fine. If for some reason the shutter did open, the worst that will happen is you will have double-exposed that one photograph. So you should be fine :D|||changing lenses is fine. The film will only be exposed to light, when you press the shutter button and when you open the back without reeling the film back in the canister.

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