This looks like it was developed and scanned by the lab near my home... This is the lab's scan of Lucky C200, though in 135 format. I developed this roll myself using an adjusted dilution of Lucky G-71 developer (Lucky sells C-41 lab processing kits similar to Kodak's and Fuji's through...
I don't mind. I just need to learn how to use the functions of this forum (which is a bit difficult for a Gen Z who isn't exactly proficient in English).
Yes, the materials I screenshotted are exactly the second and third items listed by Yezishu: 2.《美国伊斯曼胶片加工方法》 and 3.《摄影配方药物大全》.
Additionally, I have another source—a 1974 translated document by the China National Chemical Information Center titled "American Eastman Film Processing Methods". Regrettably, it lists no references and doesn't even have a copyright page—this was not a publicly published book, but rather what...
An old Chinese book actually contains the processing formula for Eastman 5251 Color Negative Film (which, according to other sources, was a motion picture color negative film used between 1962 and 1968). I believe this is the ECN process. The same book also includes a process for Eastman 5381...
I believe this must be an issue that arose when translating from Chinese into English. Besides, film photography forums in China have long been in decline (even the surviving ones make it difficult to access historical content from the early 2000s). Most Chinese film enthusiasts now connect with...
They were discontinued around the early 2000s, and it seems they were never launched on a large scale. Lucky film is one of the worst films in the world—the reversal film is even slightly worse than AGFA CT100 (though there are only a few factories in the world capable of producing C‑41 and E‑6...
I have a collection of research reports published in 1979 by the Technical Institute of Physics and Chemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (which was still called the Institute of Photographic Chemistry at that time). It mentions that in 1973 they began trial production of a duplicating...
According to the staff at Lucky, they do not have film base of sufficient thickness for producing large format color film, and there are currently no plans to manufacture large format color negative film.
I hope LLL can be listed overseas soon. Their film is currently undergoing small-scale public testing. The testing fee is 1,000 RMB (150 USD), which allows you to gradually receive 100 rolls of 135 black-and-white film (36 exposures) or 120 black-and-white film before January 31, 2028. Larger...
I think this is somewhat challenging; these films are still in the testing phase and are extremely unstable (The testing rolls of 135 have very poor emulsion hardening, requiring strict temperature control at 20°C during development and the use of a hardener). Color films will probably have to...
The testing rolls of 120,Shot with a 617 camera, E.I.64.Developed in Kodak Tmax RS for 7 minutes (the original scanned file was over 200MB, so I had to compress it heavily).
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.