Could this be where you creased the film a bit in loading the spool: I've seen that a couple of times when the film stuck and I forced it on a bit?
John Coyle Brisbane, Australia -----Original Message----- > > On 10/23/2011 10:38 PM, Mark C wrote: >> Submitted for your perusal... here's a photo I snapped a week ago in a state >> park near Augusta, Michigan. Notice the globular lights on the left side of the frame and what appears to be light shining towards the center of the frame: >> >> http://www.calarti.com/peso/2011-0435_tu.jpg >> >> Here's the frame taken immediately before that one: >> >> http://www.calarti.com/peso/2011-0435_tu.jpg >> >> Yeah - I drew the circle on the second one to show where the lights were on >> the first. At first I thought that this must be lens flare of some sort, but I'm certain the sun was behind me. The trail proceeds to the north and while it twists and turns a bit as it follows the edge of a sinkhole lake, it never strays more than from NW to NE. The shot was taken around 2 PM local time last Saturday, which I reckon to be about 11:30 true local time - which would put the sun in the south-southeast area. Behind the bushes that the light is emanating from is a big empty field - just soybean stubble for a couple hundred yards. >> >> Taken on an Mz-S with an FA 20-35 f4 zoom, #29 deep red filter, lens hood in >> place. No Photoshopping other than contrast and tone adjustments. The photo was shot on Neopan 400 pushed to ISO 16000 and developed in HC-110 Dil B. I checked the negatives and there are no developer / agitation marks. The lights are in the negative as areas of density. The area of density does extend beyond the frame, into the sockets on the film. This is the last frame on the role and there are no kinks or folds on it (or elsewhere on the roll...) >> >> I'm guessing a pin-hole light leak in my changing bag? Any one else ever get >> this sort of thing? >> >> Mark C. -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List PDML@pdml.net http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.