help! two cards full of precious work photos lost
Posted: Wed Sep 24, 2008 5:35 am
hello all
am in rather a desperate panic / major sulk and wonder if someone can help me
two days ago, i filled two 4gig kingston cards with images during a photo shoot
when i got back to base, i popped the cards in the card reader and hooked it up to an unfamiliar (not my own) laptop
the autorun script ran and ran but the first card didn't show up (drive:I didn't show a little eos folder) so i cancelled - which took a loooong time - the autorun script and pulled out the card
a message said something like "error writing to drive:I" which i rather foolishly ignored
then i swapped the cards over and repeated the steps above - and got the same message when i pulled out the card
suddenly it dawned on me what the message had meant: windows had been trying to do something TO the card rather than just read it - and i had probably just screwed up two, rather than one card
the next step was to put the cards back in the camera to see if i could (a) view the images still, and (b) download them directly from the camera.
horror of horrors: i got a message in camera (i shoot with a 5d by the way) saying that the card(s) was not formatted
then i started googling photo recovery and dropped a help message in dpreview
following various suggestions, i have tried to extract the photos off the card using the paidfor software photorecovery and the free program zar (and one other i can't remember)
all three recovery attempts resulted in the same thing: the programs could see the files on the cards and successfully copied them to a folder on the desktop
the file sizes (c. 4mbs and c. 12mbs respectively) and suffixes (.jpg and .cr2) were also the expected ones (and the computer gave them the appropriate icons too) BUT when i right clicked on the files to open them - whether it was in photoshop, bridge, faststone maxviewer or the standard windows viewer - i got a message which said that the files were the wrong sort and/or were probably corrupted (or words to that efect depending on which app i was trying to do the opening with)
subsequently, following some advice from a dpreview user, i opened a .cr2 file in notepad and found the words canon eos amongs the gibberish; and then i opened the same file in exiftool and found some, though not very much, familiar looking exif data
i decided to ask for help here when i couldn't work out how to get exiftool to extract a thumbnail for me (all a bit codelike and scary it looked to my gui-accustomed eyes)
to recap then, i have two corrupted/strangely reformatted cards full of photos which i have managed to recover and which look like the kinds of files they should be BUT which i can't open
two young models, a fashion stylist, a makeup artist and a magazine editor are all eager to see those images, as am i -who flew to dublin as a A FAVOUR to a friend to make them in the first place
any suggestions how to proceed will make me (and all of them) very happy indeed; and the right suggestion will result in a bottle of wine being couriered to your door
please please pretty please..!
thanks very much,
ben
am in rather a desperate panic / major sulk and wonder if someone can help me
two days ago, i filled two 4gig kingston cards with images during a photo shoot
when i got back to base, i popped the cards in the card reader and hooked it up to an unfamiliar (not my own) laptop
the autorun script ran and ran but the first card didn't show up (drive:I didn't show a little eos folder) so i cancelled - which took a loooong time - the autorun script and pulled out the card
a message said something like "error writing to drive:I" which i rather foolishly ignored
then i swapped the cards over and repeated the steps above - and got the same message when i pulled out the card
suddenly it dawned on me what the message had meant: windows had been trying to do something TO the card rather than just read it - and i had probably just screwed up two, rather than one card
the next step was to put the cards back in the camera to see if i could (a) view the images still, and (b) download them directly from the camera.
horror of horrors: i got a message in camera (i shoot with a 5d by the way) saying that the card(s) was not formatted
then i started googling photo recovery and dropped a help message in dpreview
following various suggestions, i have tried to extract the photos off the card using the paidfor software photorecovery and the free program zar (and one other i can't remember)
all three recovery attempts resulted in the same thing: the programs could see the files on the cards and successfully copied them to a folder on the desktop
the file sizes (c. 4mbs and c. 12mbs respectively) and suffixes (.jpg and .cr2) were also the expected ones (and the computer gave them the appropriate icons too) BUT when i right clicked on the files to open them - whether it was in photoshop, bridge, faststone maxviewer or the standard windows viewer - i got a message which said that the files were the wrong sort and/or were probably corrupted (or words to that efect depending on which app i was trying to do the opening with)
subsequently, following some advice from a dpreview user, i opened a .cr2 file in notepad and found the words canon eos amongs the gibberish; and then i opened the same file in exiftool and found some, though not very much, familiar looking exif data
i decided to ask for help here when i couldn't work out how to get exiftool to extract a thumbnail for me (all a bit codelike and scary it looked to my gui-accustomed eyes)
to recap then, i have two corrupted/strangely reformatted cards full of photos which i have managed to recover and which look like the kinds of files they should be BUT which i can't open
two young models, a fashion stylist, a makeup artist and a magazine editor are all eager to see those images, as am i -who flew to dublin as a A FAVOUR to a friend to make them in the first place
any suggestions how to proceed will make me (and all of them) very happy indeed; and the right suggestion will result in a bottle of wine being couriered to your door
please please pretty please..!
thanks very much,
ben