English Rules

Recovering the Photographs

July 24, 2005

On Thursday night my family and I attended a beautiful wedding on the beach of Lake Michigan. The bride was a former student of mine, our kids' babysitter, and a dear friend, so I was especially anxious about being entrusted with the role of "official" photographer. I wanted to make sure that the bride and groom had a photographic record of the event that at least approximated what they remembered.

The night before the wedding I recharged the digital camera's battery and packed a film camera and an extra set of batteries, just in case something disastrous happened. I unloaded all the photos from the 6GB Hitachi microdrive and set it carefully back into the camera. Two 256MB CF cards would serve as backup. I felt pretty confident that everything would go smoothly.

The beach setting was gorgeous, and the bride and groom and all the attendants and families were gracious as I took some formal shots before the ceremony. Other than a few drops of rain, everything went off without a hitch—unless you count the one involving the bride and groom. The reception, too, was lovely, even during the 30 minutes or so of rain when the guests scrambled back to the cottage for cover.

But then something strange happened. The camera stopped working. No matter what I tried, it wouldn't snap any more pictures. When I looked at the LED screen, I saw a blinking "CHA." Could it mean the camera needed to be charged? No. It would have shown a blinking battery indicator. Was the memory card full? It was too unlikely that I'd filled 6GB in the few hours I was taking pictures. I pulled the card out and threw in a backup. Everything worked fine with the new card, which was a relief. But what was the problem with the other one? I'd have to wait until the next day to find out.

The next day I plugged the card into my computer to take a look at the files and transfer them over to my hard drive. I clicked on the folder containing the photos. Nothing happened. I clicked again. An error message popped up. The folder was unreadable; files were either corrupted or missing. Uh oh. The pit that had been forming in my stomach thrusted its way into my throat.

A quick check of the drive's properties showed that 4GB of its space had been filled. Clearly there was something on it. Little good it would do me, though, if I couldn't open the folder. Dragging the drive's contents over to the computer's hard drive didn't work either. So, I went to Google and searched for file recovery. The results were promising, as it looked like I was far from alone in my plight and a number of companies had created software to bring back files from the dead.

The first software I downloaded, a freeware program, balked about halfway through the scan of the microdrive and stopped working altogether in subsequent tries. The second and third programs allowed for the downloading of a demo version that would show me what they could recover but wouldn't let me save the files until I shelled out some bucks. Neither of them worked.

I decided to try one more before giving up, mostly because a couple other web sites had recommended it. The program, PHOTORECOVERY by LC Technology, operated the same way as the second and third programs, so I downloaded it and ran the scan, feeling not the least bit hopeful. To my surprise, though, it started showing the very first pictures I had taken with the microdrive— pictures that I had already deleted months ago. But the first program had shown a few pictures, too, before it crashed.

PHOTORECOVERY kept going and going. And going. I let it continue scanning in the background, and when I looked at it again a couple hours later it had completed its scouring of the drive and found over 1,600 photos. I zipped back to the LC Technology website, paid my $40, and scanned the microdrive again. This time, as it found the photos, it saved them to the hard drive folder of my choice. The photos were restored. All of them. Every photo from the wedding, and every other photo that I had ever taken with that memory card. For the first time since the ordeal began, I smiled.

just married

I'm still not sure what corrupted the files in the first place, but after I got all the pictures off, I reformatted the microdrive from within the camera, and everything seems to be working fine again. A few websites recommend reformatting memory cards every once in a while anyway (keeping in mind that it erases everything currently on the card and makes it a LOT harder to recover those files later). Apparently, reformatting every so often helps avoid the kind of file corruption that happened with mine. The good news, though, is that if your photo files ever do get corrupted, or if you accidentally delete them, and you really, really need them, there is a good chance that you'll be able to get them back—with a little perseverance and luck.

Comments (6)

1Sarah G wrote:

Wow, scary.  Jeff and I almost always format our memory card after copying photos to one of our computers.  I never really thought to ask why, except it seemed like a slightly more efficient way to clean up.  But maybe Jeff knew about the file corruption issue...  Glad you got the pictures back!

Jul 25, 2005 ; 9:09 AM

2Nicole wrote:

Oh my word, Karl...
I wanted to throw up reading this! What an anxiety-riddled experience. You set up the story really well, as I felt that heart-pounding blob of dread as it unfolded. I am super glad ad strangely grateful for the happy ending.
Love,
Nicole

Jul 25, 2005 ; 3:44 PM

3Aunt Ginny wrote:

Amazing, Karl! Nice to have your own computer geek troubleshooter inside your very own skin! Good for your sleuthing until your found the photos. And what a beautiful shot on the page! You amaze me.

Jul 27, 2005 ; 9:36 AM

4Nicole wrote:

Hi, it's Nicole again...

I realized, sheepishly, that I failed to comment on the beauty of the photo of Anne's wedding that you posted.  It's lovely, Karl, really stunning. 

You're hired for my wedding, tentatively planned for 2040..if I'm lucky...

Love,

Nicole

 

Jul 27, 2005 ; 8:44 PM

5Karl wrote:

Hey, thanks for the compliments on the photo. It helps to have beautiful weather and gorgeous subject matter. 

Jul 28, 2005 ; 2:03 PM

6anne wrote:

Karl...I could never be more thankful that you are such a computer geek. Thank you so much for taking the photos and pouring your time into recovering them. I am looking forward to seeing the rest of them. :)

Aug 3, 2005 ; 3:07 PM

Post a Comment

(you may use HTML tags for style)

Notify me when others comment on this entry.


Comment Notification

I don't want to comment now, but please notify me when others comment on this entry:

Email:

Notify Me
Stop Notifying Me

In This Section

All Entries

Search

+ Advanced Search

Recently
in my life...

  • Thought I had to use tables for bottom-aligning some elements. Then remembered display:inline-block and the IE6 hasLayout hack. Beauty! — Thu, Nov 20 at 8:18 am
  • finished chapter 10 before 2 a.m. Not as bad as I thought. Now for my 5 hours of sleep... — Thu, Nov 20 at 1:39 am
  • It's gonna be a long, long night. — Wed, Nov 19 at 9:48 pm
  • What is it about Jackson Browne's "These Days" that makes every musician under the sun want to cover it? (don't get me wrong; I <3 it ... — Wed, Nov 19 at 11:59 am
  • I'd like to go on record as saying that I have no idea what the govt should or shouldn't do regarding the financial bailout. — Wed, Nov 19 at 7:09 am
  • Thanks, everyone, for jQuery plugin suggestions. anyone else have "must mentions" for Learning jQuery, 2nd ed.? — Mon, Nov 17 at 9:03 am

More of the same

Recent Comments

Winston Nolan on The Best Birthday Present Ever: ah man this post is precious! hope…

Ginger kid on Why the Button Fly?: Well......... In defence of buttons everywhere....... Zipper…

Rebecca on Invisible Friends: Chris, are you some sort of Wacked…

Unni Lindell on Why the Button Fly?: I'm just kidding. ;) Buttons rock because…

Unni Lindell on Why the Button Fly?: Haha. You purchased a girl jeans. FAIL

Site Info

Elsewhere

My Bookshelf

Reading Now
  • Staggerford: A Novel
  • Four Seasons in Rome: On Twins, Insomnia, and the Biggest Funeral in the History of the World
  • unChristian: What a New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity... and Why It Matters
  • Light: Science and Magic: An Introduction to Photographic Lighting
Just Read
  • JavaScript: The Definitive Guide
  • The Art of Learning: A Journey in the Pursuit of Excellence
  • The Know-It-All: One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World
  • Jesus and Nonviolence: A Third Way (Facets)
On the Shelf
  • Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software (Addison-Wesley Professional Computing Series)
  • Godel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid
  • Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life
  • The Elephant Vanishes: Stories
  • The Catcher in the Rye
  • The Tenacity of the Cockroach: Conversations with Entertainment's Most Enduring Outsiders

© Karl Swedberg

widescreen bonus!

+ Blogroll

Noteworthy Articles

This Math Whiz Called It for Obama Months Ago (NY Times)

In an election season of unlikely outcomes, Mr. Silver, 30, is perhaps the most unlikely media star to emerge...

Op-Ed Columnist: The Obama Agenda

Right now many commentators are urging Barack Obama to think small. Let?s hope he has the good sense to ignore their advice...

Obama for president (Anchorage Daily News)

Palin's rise captivates us but nation needs a steady hand...

McCain's Non-Support for Troops and Veterans: The Master List

Senator John McCain has a very clear, long, and illustrious history of not supporting troops and veterans one bit...

Music & nightlife | A suburban mom's rock-star moment | Seattle Times Newspaper

Though Ketola has a reputation as a singer/songwriter in the Christian music community, she never expected that she'd leave her husband on their 17th anniversary, mind you, and take up with another man. On stage. In front of 20,000 people...

Make-Believe Maverick (Rolling Stone)

A closer look at the life and career of John McCain reveals a disturbing record of recklessness and dishonesty...

The Palins' un-American activities (Salon)

The Republican ticket is working hard this week to make Barack Obama's tenuous connection to graying, '60s revolutionary Bill Ayers a major campaign issue. But the Palins' connection to anti-American extremism is much more central to their political biographies...

Once Elected, Palin Hired Friends and Lashed Foes (New York Times)

Ms. Havemeister was one of at least five schoolmates Ms. Palin hired, often at salaries far exceeding their private sector wages.

Obama to Palin: 'Don't Mock the Constitution' | The Trail | washingtonpost.com

Sen. Barack Obama delivered an impassioned defense of the Constitution and the rights of terrorism suspects tonight, striking back at one of the biggest applause lines in Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin's speech to the GOP convention...

Attacks, praise stretch truth at GOP convention - (Associated Press

Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and her Republican supporters held back little Wednesday as they issued dismissive attacks on Barack Obama and flattering praise on her credentials to be vice president. In some cases, the reproach and the praise stretched the truth.

State of the Art - New Nikon Holds a Secret - NYTimes.com

If you saw it just sitting there, you?d never guess that the new Nikon D90 is a mind-blowing, game-changing camera...

Captcha is broken - now what? (The Guardian)

Websites use Captchas in an attempt to disrupt the spam and malware economy - but they are not working...

Hoping It's Biden (New York Times)

Barack Obama has decided upon a vice-presidential running mate. And while I don't know who it is as I write, for the good of the country, I hope he picked Joe Biden...

The Candidate We Still Don?t Know (New York Times)

Most Americans still don't know, as Marshall writes, that on the campaign trail "McCain frequently forgets key elements of policies, gets countries' names wrong, forgets things he?s said only hours or days before and is frequently just confused." ...

Is Jon Stewart the Most Trusted Man in America? (New York Times)

Mr. Stewart describes his job as "throwing spitballs" from the back of the room and points out that "The Daily Show" mandate is to entertain, not inform. Still, he and his writers have energetically tackled the big issues of the day...