You know, when I first read your message I thought you had tried to load IR film into an ist D... Now *that* would be idiotic :)
I don't know how the ist uses infrared light, but I would develop the film anyway. Maybe you'll just get some spilling on the edge of the frames and the images will be usable... j On 2/2/06, Scott Loveless <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > So I've had this roll of HIE in the fridge for a while and finally > decided to expose it. So I loaded it, in the dark, into the *ist, > attached a lens and #25 red filter, and headed to the great > out-of-doors. After exposing my very first roll of infrared film I > unloaded the camera, in the dark, put the cassette back into it's > canister, and then placed it back into the fridge to await processing. > This was a few days ago. > > Today. Page 36 of the operating manual. "Infrared film cannot be > used. This camera uses infrared rays to detect film transport so > infrared film may be exposed." > > Feel free to point at me and laugh. > > -- > Scott Loveless > http://www.twosixteen.com > > -- > "You have to hold the button down" -Arnold Newman > > -- Juan Buhler http://www.jbuhler.com photoblog at http://photoblog.jbuhler.com