• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Best C-41 Kit to start with??

Manners street Lads

A
Manners street Lads

  • 0
  • 0
  • 15
Arkansas Ent

A
Arkansas Ent

  • 3
  • 2
  • 46

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
203,048
Messages
2,849,120
Members
101,621
Latest member
Victor1
Recent bookmarks
0

John Galt

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Mar 8, 2017
Messages
357
Location
Rivendell
Format
Medium Format
Having acquired a huge lot of 120 and 220 Kodak C-41 color films ( aprox 15 yrs old and frozen since purchase ) from a Portrait Studio estate sale I am excited to begin shooting color with my Hasselblad.

What would those here experienced with the C-41 process recommend for a C-41 kit that is easy to prepare and produces quality negatives?

Thanks in advance.
 
This is a good kit but apparently rather expensive in the USA: https://www.freestylephoto.biz/660163-Fuji-C-41-X-Press-Kit-5-L-Processing-Kit

Otherwise you may be better off buying the individual components depending on how much film you plan to process. Those would be:

- developer replenisher

- developer starter

- bleach

- fix

- not stabilizer - I should have said 'final rinse' -

Tom
 
Last edited:
Go to Freestyle and buy the individual Kodak Flexicolor chemistry. Get the Flexicolor RA Bleach and Fixer. The Final rinse not stabilizer Developer and I use 1 shot. The bleach can be replenished, 1 5L will last almost forever. The developer and bleach starters are cheap and last forever. The developer has a shorter shelf life but it is so cheap, 12 bucks to make 6 liters of working solution, I just make new when it get old. Unique is well, unique, in they split cases so you don't need to buy large quantities.
 
I've had great luck with the Arista kits, both C41 and E6. I like they because they are all liquid and more convenient. I will keep them refrigerated, usually mix them for two-shot, and carefully blow Bloxygen into the bottles on each use.
 
Go to Freestyle and buy the individual Kodak Flexicolor chemistry. Get the Flexicolor RA Bleach and Fixer. The Final rinse not stabilizer Developer and I use 1 shot. The bleach can be replenished, 1 5L will last almost forever. The developer and bleach starters are cheap and last forever. The developer has a shorter shelf life but it is so cheap, 12 bucks to make 6 liters of working solution, I just make new when it get old. Unique is well, unique, in they split cases so you don't need to buy large quantities.

I use the same chems as well. why nnot use the best you can with your chems, like you do with your film and hardware? I got hit and miss results when i first started my own c41 development at home, because i was using cheap c41 kits. it changed for the better when i spent a little more money per roll using, what i will call the real c41 chems.
 
Go to Freestyle and buy the individual Kodak Flexicolor chemistry. Get the Flexicolor RA Bleach and Fixer. The Final rinse not stabilizer Developer and I use 1 shot. The bleach can be replenished, 1 5L will last almost forever. The developer and bleach starters are cheap and last forever. The developer has a shorter shelf life but it is so cheap, 12 bucks to make 6 liters of working solution, I just make new when it get old. Unique is well, unique, in they split cases so you don't need to buy large quantities.
I should have said Unique photo in NJ.
 
Unless you have a Jobo, use a lab. There is very little cost saving, no creative control, and pretty much only downsides to the consumer C41 kits. Replenished C41 in a computer controlled machine that is subject to regular testing however yields great results cheaply. Even if you have a Jobo...do the cost calculations and you still might find it worthwhile to just have a lab run it.
 
I feel whatever gets you to try processing is a good thing. Not a thing wrong with using small "hobby " kits. For someone who doesn't want to mess with storing and disposing of chemicals the 1 L kits work fine.
My biggest problem is scanning color negatives, I can print in the darkroom easier than I can "tolerate" trying to calibrate a scanner. Slide film is easy to scan.
 
I feel whatever gets you to try processing is a good thing. Not a thing wrong with using small "hobby " kits. For someone who doesn't want to mess with storing and disposing of chemicals the 1 L kits work fine.
My biggest problem is scanning color negatives, I can print in the darkroom easier than I can "tolerate" trying to calibrate a scanner. Slide film is easy to scan.

Try the demo of Negative Lab Pro. Makes converting color negatives a breeze even when using a scanner. You simply tell your scanner to bring it in as a positive. Then in LR you do the rest with NLP. It's the best method of converting film I've tried short of using my Fuji Frontiers.
 
Go to Freestyle and buy the individual Kodak Flexicolor chemistry. Get the Flexicolor RA Bleach and Fixer. The Final rinse not stabilizer Developer and I use 1 shot. The bleach can be replenished, 1 5L will last almost forever. The developer and bleach starters are cheap and last forever. The developer has a shorter shelf life but it is so cheap, 12 bucks to make 6 liters of working solution, I just make new when it get old. Unique is well, unique, in they split cases so you don't need to buy large quantities.

+1

This is the way to go. The RA NR bleach replenished lasts forever, the standard C-41 fixer can also be replenished and lasts a very long time. I usually get the 20L standard C-41 developer and use it one shot. The bleach and dev starters are not expensive and last a long time.
 
Try the demo of Negative Lab Pro. Makes converting color negatives a breeze even when using a scanner. You simply tell your scanner to bring it in as a positive. Then in LR you do the rest with NLP. It's the best method of converting film I've tried short of using my Fuji Frontiers.
Thanks for the info.
 
I don't know how to give you a link but I am pleased with the 1 liter c-41 kits available from The Film Photography Project store. Comes in powered form so they can send it through the mail. I think it was around 24.00/kit including shipping last time I ordered and I have processed as many as 15 rolls of 120 film with a single batch.

I really like having the control of processing my own film as much as the savings. If there were a lab close by where I could get film processed I would consider it, but I'm glad I got frustrated with closing labs and postage fees enough to try home processing. I now process my own far cheaper, when I want, and have no one to blame but myself if there is a problem.

It's easy. Takes time, but is easy.
 
Last edited:
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.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom