Chan Tran
Subscriber
Since I have no darkroom anymore so I think I would want to shoot some Ektachrome E100. I wonder where is the best place to send the film for developed and mounted. I prefer cardboard mount rather than plastic.
Please define what you mean by "best."
Are you looking for the cheapest? The fastest turn around? Or the highest quality no matter how much it costs or how long it takes?
The E6 process is standardized, so processing quality *should* be similar from any lab. But of course there may be some labs that try to cut corners, and other labs that rigorously follow the chemistry manufacturer's quality assurance recommendations. I am guessing it is probably going to be difficult to get any kind of reliable data about which labs are consistanatly "better."
It may be like the French fries, and depend on whether yours are the first order to be fried in the freshly changed oil, or the the last order to be fried in the old oil which should have been changed yesterday. ;-)
I understand, but how are any of us really going to know? Sure, we can tell you if something has gone wrong (dust, fingerprints, etc.) but otherwise, we can only assume everything was done correctly.Best in quality regardless of price. Best means adhere strictly to manufacturer's recommendations. Keep the process in tight control. Keep the film clean. It's not like the French fires where personal preference plays a role.
I've used this group for years. The quality and turn around time is excellent.
The Great American Photo Lab
Does Kodak in Rochester do it?. Even though Eastman Kodak Co is a defunct bankrupt shadow of it's former self, perhaps the buyer, being Alaris I believe, still offers this service. If so, I believe I'd be inclined to send it to them.
You're absolutely correct. For many years it was North Coast. A year or two back they had the name change to Great American. I've known Richard Schute the original owner since the 1980's. He was a well known photographer throughout So Cal amongst all of us who were Drag Racers back then. He frequented the race facilities as a reporter / photographer. He sold the business awhile back but is sill listed as part of the long time team at the Carlsbad location.The Great American Photo Lab is apparently the same lab shown on my list as "North Coast Photographic Services." The ULR for their website is, "northcoastphoto.com," but their home webpage is titled, "The Great American Photo Lab," and under that it says, "SAME GREAT CREW. SAME GREAT SERVICES. SAME GREAT QUALITY. FORMERLY NCPS."
The recommendation by @Trail Images makes a total of 4 recommendations I have seen posted for that lab.
The Great American Photo Lab is apparently the same lab shown on my list as "North Coast Photographic Services." The ULR for their website is, "northcoastphoto.com," but their home webpage is titled, "The Great American Photo Lab," and under that it says, "SAME GREAT CREW. SAME GREAT SERVICES. SAME GREAT QUALITY. FORMERLY NCPS."
The recommendation by @Trail Images makes a total of 4 recommendations I have seen posted for that lab.
It is interesting that on the Praus website their "Services" page shows E-6 at the top of their list. Their price list does say, "unmounted, only" but that seems to be the norm these days.Edgar Praus in Rochester, NY does excellent E-6 work. I’ve been bringing my slides to him for half a decade and have never had an issue, I highly recommend his services.
While I was living in California I mailed my film in, and was very pleased with his workflow for supporting mail in orders as well.
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Praus Productions, Traditional Photography at its best
Traditional photography lab processing E-6, C-41 and black and white film. We also print from your negatives on traditional photographic papers. We can also scan your film negatives.www.4photolab.com
It is interesting that on the Praus website their "Services" page shows E-6 at the top of their list. Their price list does say, "unmounted, only" but that seems to be the norm these days.
I’m sorry, yes, last I knew they had run out of the Pakon plastic mounts they were using, and the mounts are out of production. I missed the part of the post regarding mounting.
Icon in Los Angeles mounts in cardboard, however I have had bad experience with their process control, lots of slides shifted severely magenta from insufficient replenishment.
This could be caused by insufficient amount of work. If the chemicals sitting idle they get weaken and the process would be out of control. This is what I am afraid of since film isn't popular these days.
I understand, but how are any of us really going to know? Sure, we can tell you if something has gone wrong (dust, fingerprints, etc.) but otherwise, we can only assume everything was done correctly.
The point I was trying to make with the French fries has nothing to do with personal preferences. I was trying to illustrate there can be random influences on quality. Some may call it "luck." A lab can return a thousand rolls of perfectly processed film to hundreds of satisfied customers, but if yours is the one roll that came back with a thumbprint on it, what does that mean?
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The only lab I've actually used for E6 in the past decade was Process One, in the Kansas City MO area. I sent them two rolls of slide film in 2019, and they looked good. However, I see this on their page about E6 processing at: https://processonephoto.com/e6-slide-film-processing.htm,
"Note: Due to a global shortage of mounts, we currently cannot mount 35mm slides. We can return your slide film uncut in roll sleeving, or cut and sleeved in strips of 4 frames."
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I have been maintaining a list of processing labs, which I've put together over the years. At one time or another, some photography forum member recommended one of the following labs. When checking the links today, I see quite a few are saying they are not currently mounting slides with their E6 processing.
In no particular order:
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Simple Photography Services, Petaluma, CA
Photrio member Adrian Bacon. I've been happy with his C4 processing and digitizing services. (I have not sent any E6)
-Film Processing, Sales, & Cameras, Bespoke Prints, Darkroom Rental | Simple Photography Services
Film processing and sales nationwide via mail-order or local pickup/drop-off and darkroom rental in the North SF Bay Area.www.simplephotographyservices.com
Photolab (Photolaboratory), Berkeley, CA
https://www.photolaboratory.com/film-processing.html
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Precision Photo, Austin, TX
https://precisionphotolab.com/film-developing
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The Darkroom, San Clemente, CA,
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35mm Film Developing – Free Mailer & Fastest Turnaround
Send your 35mm rolls with our free mailer for C‑41, E‑6 & B&W processing. Fastest mail-in film developing and scan upload - starting at $13.thedarkroom.com
North Coast Photographic Services
5451 Avenida Encinas Suite D Carlsbad, CA 92008 760-931-6809
https://northcoastphoto.com
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Richard Photo Lab, Los Angeles,
21515 Centre Pointe Parkway in Santa Clarita, California
-Richard Photo Lab: Premium Film Developing, Scanning and Printing
Since 1970, Richard Photo Lab provides world-class film developing to both novice and professional photographers around the world. Whether you shoot C-41, Black and White or E6 - your film is in good hands.www.richardphotolab.com
NortheastPhotographic, Westport Island, ME
Photrio sponsor
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Northeast Photographic
Northeast Photographic is New England's premier film lab. Located in Bath, Maine, we develop and scan 35mm, medium format, 4x5, 5x7, and 8x10.www.northeastphotographic.com
If you want a lab with large volume, then Dwayne definitely has a very large volume of E6 processing.
Thanks for the update. That explains why they are quoting 3-5 business days for either B&W or C-41 (processing, only), but 14-21 days for E-6 slide processing.Precision Photo in Austin sends their E6 out. They do excellent C41 in house though
Yes, I believe Dwayne's was the last lab in the US to process Kodachrome.At this point I think I go for Dwayne. I think they used to process film for Kodak. They put Kodak name on the slides that they processed.
In 2018, I sent some color negatives to Dwaynes for processing and scans. As near as I can tell the processing was OK, but I thought their scans were not that great. But to be fair, I got similar results from my local minilab, so maybe that's just what mini lab scans look like, and no fault of Dwaynes?
I came to the conclusion that my scans were produced using some kind of automatic settings with no "guy" actively managing the process. My problem was was probably due to to some kind of sub-optimal sharpening settings done to the scans. I posted about it here:Now scan or print is like french fries it depends on each individual taste. So I don't expect the guy at the lab would prefer the same thing I do and that's why I did my own printing. Now that I can't do that any more I shoot slides.
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