With either the lens' serial number or date code, that question can be answered. Canon has been transitioning to a 10-digit lens serial number (starting in 2008 with the Canon EF-S 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens) and ending the inclusion of a separate manufacturing date code.
Digital Camera serial number //// //// //// ////Canon EOS 350DDigital Camera serial number Ifyou've bought a secondhand Canon EOS 350 digital camera, take alook at the serial number. Canon digital cameras have the serialnumber on the camera body, but also inside the machine, and theserial number is electronically stamped invisibly into the exifdata of every picture the camera takes. So if you bought Canoncamera serial number, you may be interested to knowthat it's stolen!Idon't expect to get the camera back, but it would be nice tocatch the robbers who stole it. It was a violent crime, and theystrangled me and cut me with a knife.
There was quite a lot ofblood about. It will be many months before I recover, if Irecover.Ifyou have that camera, bearing in mind I don't expect to get itback, I'd like to ask of you a favour: Squeal on whoever sold youthe camera! Snitch on them! They'll have to explain where theygot it from, and the chain of events has a hope of eventuallytracking down the culprits and seeing some justice being done.Canon EOS 350Ddigital camera serial number is clearly identifiableby: the serial number on the case, and the fact that everypicture it takes has encoded into it the name 'Zyra'and/or the camera serial number.
If you have any imagefiles (img.jpg) on your computer, you can check them using'search/find' to see if they contain (in text) thatname and/or serial number. At the time of thetheft, the camera also had a distinctive lens cap which was greenand had been made from a 'Seeds of Change' spice jarlid! Also, the camera strap was unusual tough fabric and hadspecial anti-snatch dog-clips, and a custom-made grip lanyardlightly armoured using chandelier chain. Even at the time, thecamera was very well-worn and had taken in excess of ninethousand high resolution pictures in a variety of locationsaround the world, and there was evidence of such adventure invarious minor bits of damage to the body. The camera was lastseen at the time of the in, a fewmiles from the border with Guatemala.
![Code Code](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125645263/138222685.jpg)
Also seeYoucan write in, if you like. Remember:it's not you whom we're out to get!Fora more general resource on the recovery of stolen cameras, see.
![Usa Usa](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125645263/837802492.jpg)
Different manufacturers do different things. I was frustrated I could not find a Sony Serial number in Lr. I wanted to be able to recognise what camera I was using as part of my Lr import process.
Exiftool allows me to find the Internal Serial number, which uniquely identifies my Sony camera. This may be of some use to the person who had his camera stolen. I think it is bad form by Sony that they do not make the official serial number available through Lr metadata. I must check how the internal serial number compares to the actual serial number.
If I find out they are the same or different I will post here. Well summarised.I will note for future reference. I have my own app which copies my images from card to disk. I use ExifTool, combined with a database list of my cameras, which handles all the logic I need relating to serial numbers. I was driven to this to evolve my own efficient workflow, but was probably influenced to take this step based on the absence of the Sony serial number in Lr.In terms of searching for a stolen camera based on a serial number, I am not sure that those search tools take the Internal Serial number into account.