Tag: c41
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Handmade Color Processing
written by stouf on 2010-10-02 #gear #tutorialsHow to process color film at home, in your bathroom.
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The Colors of Cross-Processing - Sample Shots for many Slide Films by mephisto19
2010-03-14 #newsHow often have you asked yourself "how did these colors came out"? So here is a try to sort some samples by colors and film brands, but only a short overview and based on the labs I used and m scaner, as results are totally different in other countries!
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Tutorial: Rollei C41 Digibase – Color Film Development
written by sandravo on 2013-05-20 #gear #tutorialsIn this tutorial I will explain this specific development process step by step and share some very handy graphs I made, that will help you develop your own film.
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How to Process C41 at Home
written by maxwellmaxen on 2012-04-02 #gear #tutorialsProcessing color negative film is actually easy than most think. If you're feeling a bit braver, you should try out this tipster by Lomographer maxwellmaxen on processing your own colored films.
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Holga Wide Pinhole Camera (WPC): User Review, Exposure Table, and More
written by stouf on 2011-07-05 #gearThis camera eats film like the leviathan swallows ships. Find here a few tips about this pinhole monster.
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Handmade color processing with Tetenal Color Colortec C-41 Rapid Negative Kit
written by pepper-b on 2011-02-04 #gear #tutorialsAfter I started to develop black and white film, I really wanted to know if it was possible to do the same with color negatives, but the guys at the lab told me: “color film processing is different…you need to get the right temperatures, find the right chemistry, and the chemistry will expire fast, the lab is cheaper and reliable, you'll waste your money and time...” But I was decided!
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Do-it-Yourself: Colour Film Developed in Rodinal
written by keefmarshall on 2012-11-19 #gear #tutorialsMost easily-available and cheap film is colour negative (CN), which uses a process called C41 (or CN-16) for development. While you can do C41 development at home, the chemicals are a bit nastier, and it's cheaper and easier to use a black-and-white developer. They also keep for longer. Plus, developing colour film in Rodinal gives you a unique look - not quite like anything else.
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Kodak EDUPE Duplicating Film 35mm 3 ISO
2010-01-23 #gearHere's a review of a rare duplicating slide film at 3 ISO, the Kodak EDUPE!
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C41 in Caffenol-C Workshop Recap
written by sumsi on 2010-07-05 #newsImagine Mac Gyver or another secret spy in a desperately need to develop a film with secret pictures and no photo lab. No chemicals, no way? The participants of the workshop organized by Lomography Slovakia know now what to do in such a case: Caffenol-C process. Developing liquid base on household ingredients.
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Orwochrom UT18 (35mm, 50 iso) User-Review
2009-11-10 #gearAnyone who knows me, knows I love strange film - the older and stranger the better! And this one is definitely strange: Expired in May 1992, this East German slide film was made to be developed in ORWO process 9165, chemicals which have long since been discontinued.
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DIY Redscale with Kodak Color Plus 200
written by smbilgin on 2010-09-05 #gearI was thinking that should I buy some redscale film or should I try it for myself? And the answer was simple. Do it yourself!!
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Fuji Neopan 400CN
written by johnccc on 2011-02-28 #gearSharp. Deep. Bright. Fun. And you can even get it processed using the C-41 process! I stumbled across this film many moons ago, when I bought an odd job of film off eBay in August last year.
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Kodak Edupe (35mm, 6 ISO) Slide Duplicating Film: A Dive in a Blue World
written by stouf on 2013-03-16 #gearThis blue-toned, high saturation, fine grained slide film is normally used to duplicate slides using a slide duplicator instead of a lens. You can also use it to shoot with any camera as long as you adapt to its very low sensitivity.
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Tudorcolor XLX 200: Cheap at Quarter of the Price
written by blanches_nickelodeon on 2012-07-27 #gear #peopleTudorcolor XLX 200 is a cheap, possibly rebranded version of a quality C41 film at a fraction of the cost. Used as test film for two newly purchased SLR's read on to see if Tudor is a King of Film or a fat lump of lard. Sorry for the poor Henry The VIII analogy.
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A Fast Way to Develop Color Film
written by sirio174 on 2012-04-19 #gear #tutorialsTired of multi-baths and the steps needed to process color films? The C-41 process requires many steps, but if you use the Nova Pro-speed 41 film developer kit you can reduce the whole procedure to only two baths.
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My Lovely Kodak Pro Image 100
written by analogmonolog on 2012-01-03 #gearSearching for a brand new film that you haven't tested yet? Why don't give it a try. Kodak ProImage 100 was creatyed not to deceive but to please you with it's very natural and superb colour
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The Film that Will Not Exist Any More: ORWO Color NC19 (120, 64 iso)
written by fish300 on 2010-08-06 #gearNot so long ago I got 10 coils of film - the ORWO colour NC19 - on the internet auction. When I bought this film at once I knew that it would be necessary to show it on cross-process (C41) because the manufacturer of this film, and chemistry for it (ORWO 5168) was stopped approximately in the mid-nineties, but the price surprised me: 2$ for a film.
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3 Event Reportage Tips from Professional Photojournalists
written by uncle_jay on 2012-05-09 #gear #tutorialsWhen you think you have nothing else to shoot, try your hand at event reportage. Here are the top 3 tips that I’ve picked up from professional photojournalists whom I’ve met in the last decade.
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Kodak Ektachrome 320T (EPJ) - Magic Tungsten
written by cwyeung on 2011-05-29 #gearIn the market, options of fresh Tungsten films are becoming less and less. However, there are more expired and cheaper Tungsten films. I just bought it with the similar price of fresh negative film. Unfortunately, the seller wants to keep some for himself, and doesn't sell it to others anymore. Let's have a look on this roll of EPJ which is hard to get.
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Kodak T400 CN (35mm, 400 iso) User-Review
written by ethermoon on 2009-08-24 #gearThis is the ancestor of Kodak BW 400CN. This film is black and white, process-ready for C-41 chemicals but is already discontinued around 2003-2004. Perhaps having them are films already expired or used (good for doubles). One of my favorite B/W film!
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Black and White in C41
written by juansupergen on 2013-09-09 #gearI am now going to introduce you to the Ilford XP2 Super 400. A 35mm black and white film, but not a regular one. This film is processed in C41 as any other color negative film.
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Konica Minolta Centuria 800 (35mm, 800 iso) User-Review
written by dazb on 2009-11-29 #gearThis film comes loaded in the legendary Konica WaiWai camera.
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Kodak Pro Image (35mm, 100 iso) User-Review
written by dazb on 2009-10-17 #gearA cheap and cheerful negative film that looks good in all conditions.
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Kodak Gold: Expired 7 Years Ago
written by pvalyk on 2012-04-02 #gearHere's a story of how I shot an expired Kodak Gold 100 film by mistake. Now that I've experienced this issue, I'll share it with all of you.
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Canon Eos 300v a.k.a. Rebel Ti
2010-01-20 #gearA great choice for a first SLR if the idea of completely manual controls is daunting to you.
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Kodak Elite Chrome EBX 100: A Slide Film with Extra Color
written by m23 on 2012-04-20 #gearThis slide film delivers beautifully saturated colors, especially when cross-processed. Everyone should try this film!
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Italian food by Lomography X-Pro Slide 200
written by sirio174 on 2014-04-26 #gearOn a sunny April Sunday, I decided to load a Lomography X-Pro Slide 200 on my new Lomo LC-A+; both bought few weeks ago from the Lomography Online Shop to take some photos of some Italian food stalls in the center of my city, Como. Here my first impressions about this interesting film.
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Fuji Superia Xtra (35mm, 400 Iso) - One of the Best Color Negatives I've Ever Tried
written by zulupt on 2013-10-09 #gearThis film is really worth its title. Maybe it deserves an even better one. Find out why after the jump.
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Lomography Color Negative ISO 800 35mm
written by pvalyk on 2011-11-03 #gearThe fastest film in Lomography Shop. For Lomographers, By Lomographers.
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