iandvaag
Member
My lab (Don's photo) has increased their E6 developing price to $12 per roll. I will still use them as much as I can, but I want to shoot more film than I can afford at that price.
I want good results and don't want to compromise archival qualities.
As far as I can tell, the only place I can buy E6 chems in Canada is Argentix. Unfortunately, they only stock powder blix-based kits that I'd rather not use for critical work. I would convert it to a separate bleach and fix, the problem being that I also cannot find a source of ammonium bromide at a reasonable price in Canada.
I'm crazy, and I would be willing to mix my own blend from scratch (I'd be ok with a ferricyanide bleach although I know its untested), as is described here, but I can't source all the chemicals in Canada (artcraft did ship me some CD-3, so maybe I'd be able to source some of the other chems from them as well).
I'm wondering, how do my fellow Canadians develop E6? Do you put up with the powder E6 kits? Or is there another source that I'm unaware of?
I want good results and don't want to compromise archival qualities.
As far as I can tell, the only place I can buy E6 chems in Canada is Argentix. Unfortunately, they only stock powder blix-based kits that I'd rather not use for critical work. I would convert it to a separate bleach and fix, the problem being that I also cannot find a source of ammonium bromide at a reasonable price in Canada.
I'm crazy, and I would be willing to mix my own blend from scratch (I'd be ok with a ferricyanide bleach although I know its untested), as is described here, but I can't source all the chemicals in Canada (artcraft did ship me some CD-3, so maybe I'd be able to source some of the other chems from them as well).
I'm wondering, how do my fellow Canadians develop E6? Do you put up with the powder E6 kits? Or is there another source that I'm unaware of?