Dr Croubie
Member
So my first camera when I was a kid was a 126-film Kodak X15F. Loved that thing, and still have it. A few months ago I was at my local film shop and there was a whole bunch of old films (older than me) on the bench, they said I could pick through what I wanted. Some 120 FP4 non+ from the 70s worked quite well in Caffenol.
Anyway, there was a 126 cartridge of Kodacolour-X, so I nabbed it and put it in my old X15F. No idea what focal length, shutter speed, nor aperture that thing is. Being so old, I thought I'd just try exposing it in the brightest sun I could to attempt to overexpose it to make up for its age.
Finished it off yesterday, took it out, now I see that it's C22 process.
I've had a bit of a search around and found some useful threads like (there was a url link here which no longer exists) PE gives a recipe for a pre-hardening bath, (there was a url link here which no longer exists) says to do it cooler or it'll dissolve, and (there was a url link here which no longer exists) someone gets some kind of result with Ilfosol S.
So now I'm wondering what to do with my roll and taking suggestions.
The pre-hardening bath I could make (in theory if I can get the chems).
Doing at cooler temps is no problems, I've got some Digibase C41 mixed up which works cold.
I've also got some mixed up Tetenal E6 and RA4.
In B+W I've got handy Rodinal, Xtol, Microphen, TMax-Dev, Caffenol ingredients, and Ilford Multigrade Dev.
So the question is, if I do it in B+W, do I need the pre-hardener? Or can I just use some Kodak Hardening Fixer that I've got mixed up? I'd normally do Rodinal 1+100 stand, or are any of my other available devs better?
Or is there any new information / experience in the ten years since those other threads I found that might let me do it colour?
How about in E6 a bit colder so it doesn't melt? (I've had a lab do C41 in E6 with various degrees of success, I could do it myself this time).
I've seen people do C41 in B+W dev like rodinal and fix, then rehal-bleach or something and process back to colour, might this be an option for C22 film?
This is a complete one-off so I'm not about to buy stupid amounts of expensive chemicals I won't use again, I have no problems in destroying the entire film in the process of trying, but if I can get anything that'd be nice, if anyone's got any suggestions to add.
Anyway, there was a 126 cartridge of Kodacolour-X, so I nabbed it and put it in my old X15F. No idea what focal length, shutter speed, nor aperture that thing is. Being so old, I thought I'd just try exposing it in the brightest sun I could to attempt to overexpose it to make up for its age.
Finished it off yesterday, took it out, now I see that it's C22 process.
I've had a bit of a search around and found some useful threads like (there was a url link here which no longer exists) PE gives a recipe for a pre-hardening bath, (there was a url link here which no longer exists) says to do it cooler or it'll dissolve, and (there was a url link here which no longer exists) someone gets some kind of result with Ilfosol S.
So now I'm wondering what to do with my roll and taking suggestions.
The pre-hardening bath I could make (in theory if I can get the chems).
Doing at cooler temps is no problems, I've got some Digibase C41 mixed up which works cold.
I've also got some mixed up Tetenal E6 and RA4.
In B+W I've got handy Rodinal, Xtol, Microphen, TMax-Dev, Caffenol ingredients, and Ilford Multigrade Dev.
So the question is, if I do it in B+W, do I need the pre-hardener? Or can I just use some Kodak Hardening Fixer that I've got mixed up? I'd normally do Rodinal 1+100 stand, or are any of my other available devs better?
Or is there any new information / experience in the ten years since those other threads I found that might let me do it colour?
How about in E6 a bit colder so it doesn't melt? (I've had a lab do C41 in E6 with various degrees of success, I could do it myself this time).
I've seen people do C41 in B+W dev like rodinal and fix, then rehal-bleach or something and process back to colour, might this be an option for C22 film?
This is a complete one-off so I'm not about to buy stupid amounts of expensive chemicals I won't use again, I have no problems in destroying the entire film in the process of trying, but if I can get anything that'd be nice, if anyone's got any suggestions to add.