Hello,
today, I have processed a couple of rolls of slide film with good success (2x Ektachrome E100 @ 100 ASA, 1x Fujichrome Velvia 50 (exp. 2019) @ 40 ASA, 1x TURA Turachrome CR100 (exp. 2007) @ 80 ASA). While the density and the colors look normal on all films (one E100 seems to be a bit underexposed though), both E100s suffer from (imo, severe) water marks while Velvia 50 and CR100 have absolutely no water marks. Trust me, I looked at them in bright light in just about all angles I could think about.
The final rinse I used is the BelliniFoto E-6 stabilizer with 6 small drops of PhotoFlo 200 per film. I had the film soak in it for ca. 3 minutes. This procedure was all carried out the same for all films using distilled water.
I have absolutely no idea why only the E100s form water marks while V50 and CR100 are spotlessly clean. I want to empathize again that my process was consistent across all films; all I changed was I increased FD time by 0:30 for V50. However, I doubt that has anything to do with the marks.
It seems to me that some films are more prone to form water spots. I have made similar observations with color negatives (with ECN-2 films being much less prone to water spots) and BW as well.
Can anyone confirm this, and if yes, is there any way to get rid of the water-spots once the film is dry without getting the films ruined by scratches? I hate wiping my films with cloths (even using pecpads), I have always ruined them with scratches no matter how careful I was.
Thank you and have a good time!
today, I have processed a couple of rolls of slide film with good success (2x Ektachrome E100 @ 100 ASA, 1x Fujichrome Velvia 50 (exp. 2019) @ 40 ASA, 1x TURA Turachrome CR100 (exp. 2007) @ 80 ASA). While the density and the colors look normal on all films (one E100 seems to be a bit underexposed though), both E100s suffer from (imo, severe) water marks while Velvia 50 and CR100 have absolutely no water marks. Trust me, I looked at them in bright light in just about all angles I could think about.
The final rinse I used is the BelliniFoto E-6 stabilizer with 6 small drops of PhotoFlo 200 per film. I had the film soak in it for ca. 3 minutes. This procedure was all carried out the same for all films using distilled water.
I have absolutely no idea why only the E100s form water marks while V50 and CR100 are spotlessly clean. I want to empathize again that my process was consistent across all films; all I changed was I increased FD time by 0:30 for V50. However, I doubt that has anything to do with the marks.
It seems to me that some films are more prone to form water spots. I have made similar observations with color negatives (with ECN-2 films being much less prone to water spots) and BW as well.
Can anyone confirm this, and if yes, is there any way to get rid of the water-spots once the film is dry without getting the films ruined by scratches? I hate wiping my films with cloths (even using pecpads), I have always ruined them with scratches no matter how careful I was.
Thank you and have a good time!

