Are you printing them in a darkroom? I never tried that, and I'm not sure what "fully polarized" means. Do you mean unwanted reflections? It seems a polarizing filter on the lens should fix that, as well as darken the skies a little. I found several threads here on making B&W wet prints from color negatives. It seems that not only is it possible, but others have also been able to make good wet prints this way. I'd try it myself, but don't have any color negatives anymore, just B&W.
If you are saying the use of polarizing filters is good for color negatives, but bad for b&w negatives (?) - then I would like to hear more about that theory.
I'm certainly not nuts enough to routinely do it. I have successfully done it, via the double negative route : color neg to interpositive on pan film; interpositive to printing interneg on either pan or ortho film. Expect frustration going straight from a color neg directly to printing paper. That orange film mask is just like and orange safelight; and your contrast level in the print is likely to be awfully low and bland, even starting from Ektar. And what on earth do polarizers have to do with any of this?
Yes, I'm in a darkroom doing B&W printing. The color neg's are from films processed elsewhere - I've never processed nor printed color film. "fully polarized" meaning the color shots were shot at or near 90 degrees W/polarizer to get the maximum benefits.
Yah, I know, all sounds confusing.
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