Lucas Gesser
Member
Shot my first roll of Cinestill BWXX on a Konica A4 P&S and was not 100% happy with the results. Looking for help diagnosing what went wrong.
I contacted Cinestill before shooting and they told me that previous batches of BWXX have DX codes that read ISO 800, with an overexposure latitude of 2–3 stops — meaning a point and shoot would typically meter at 400 ISO. They also mentioned future batches would read ISO 250. Based on this, I asked the lab to develop the film at 400 ISO.
Issues with the developed film
I contacted Cinestill before shooting and they told me that previous batches of BWXX have DX codes that read ISO 800, with an overexposure latitude of 2–3 stops — meaning a point and shoot would typically meter at 400 ISO. They also mentioned future batches would read ISO 250. Based on this, I asked the lab to develop the film at 400 ISO.
Issues with the developed film
- Light leaks on the first few frames — I've never had this with my Konica A4 before. Could this be from loading the film incorrectly?
- Overall low contrast, thin-looking negatives — the blacks look washed out, not dense. Underexposure? Wrong development?
- Black blots near the sprocket holes — not sure what could cause this.
- Could the DX code mismatch have caused the thin negatives, or was the 400 ISO dev the right call?
- Are the light leaks on the first frames likely a loading issue on my end, or could they have happened at the lab (e.g. during unloading)?
- What typically causes black blots near the sprockets — is this a lab chemistry/agitation issue, or something with the film itself?
- Any other red flags in this combo of symptoms that point to one cause over another?

Double X doesn't have remjet, not sure if Cinestill does anything to alter the regular Kodak Double X cine camera film other than in desperation or error use the wrong DX coding on the finished cassette.