Best place to get E6 developed?

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Chan Tran

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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.
 

EricTheReddish

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I'll be interested in this too. Though many (most?) places I've found that process E-6 don't do mounting 🤨
 

runswithsizzers

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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. ;-)
 
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Chan Tran

Chan Tran

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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. ;-)

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. If the process is in control the first and the last roll should be the same. You don't replace the chemicals but rather continuously replenish them.
 
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runswithsizzers

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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 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)
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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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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
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NortheastPhotographic, Westport Island, ME
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