Fredrick Van Atta
Member
I bought two vintage cameras on Saturday. One was the brownie with exposed film inside, it is a 620 color negative specifying a C-22 process. Numerous posts have said I would be able to process it myself in D-76 chemistry, I use a stock solution and an Ilford fixer, are there any suggestions on developing and fixing times? Also, would I be able to spool 620 film onto a 120 developing reel? the film backing paper appears to be an exact match to a roll of 120 I put next to it, though the 620 spool length is a touch shorter, it can't be more than a mm or two. My other option, and first instinct, is to take the film to my Pro Lab and have it sent out to a specialty processor in hopes of best preserving what images might be remaining on the film.
Also, stamped into the metal inside the camera body it says "Do Not Use 120 Film" but the Brownie Hawkeye site my GF searched said it was possible, and even without respooling the 120 film. Again, the only difference I can see is a slight variation in the spool size, is it significant enough to disrupt the cameras function?
Also, stamped into the metal inside the camera body it says "Do Not Use 120 Film" but the Brownie Hawkeye site my GF searched said it was possible, and even without respooling the 120 film. Again, the only difference I can see is a slight variation in the spool size, is it significant enough to disrupt the cameras function?