J Rollinger
Member
I need to respool some 35mm Tmax on a 127 spool, Can i do this under my red light or do i have to be in complete darkness?
Thanks
Thanks
Just leave the main room lights on. Re-spooling film can be confusing and to do a good job a bright light on the subject would be very helpful.
Sandy
Just leave the main room lights on. Re-spooling film can be confusing and to do a good job a bright light on the subject would be very helpful.
Sandy
Yeah, what he said.
If you do this you will not have to worry about fogging the film.
But all seriousness aside, the only way you can respool 35mm film under red light would be if it was ortho film. I cannot think of an ortho 35 mm film made to day. anyone know of one?
Steve
I have some ortho film in a bulk roll that expired in the 80s... want some?
But all seriousness aside, the only way you can respool 35mm film under red light would be if it was ortho film. I cannot think of an ortho 35 mm film made to day. anyone know of one?
I have some ortho film in a bulk roll that expired in the 80s... want some?
*********I need to respool some 35mm Tmax on a 127 spool, Can i do this under my red light or do i have to be in complete darkness?
Thanks
Here's a thought, plenty of photogs use development by inspection and a dim green light. Would that work in this situation?
I need to respool some 35mm Tmax on a 127 spool, Can i do this under my red light or do i have to be in complete darkness?
Thanks
AFAIK the only film that can be used with safelight is Ortho-Litho- such as APHS. Anything else will fog.
You can use certain IR wavelengths with night vision goggles...Mr. Bond.
Actually, there are several folks that do use the IR Night Vision Goggles for cutting film, or developing by inspection. For re-spooling film, and getting the paper backing positioned correctly, the IR NVG may be just the ticket........You can use certain IR wavelengths with night vision goggles......
David, are you developing the ORTHO Lith in your paper developer too, like I used to do ?
Peter
Actually, there are several folks that do use the IR Night Vision Goggles for cutting film, or developing by inspection. For re-spooling film, and getting the paper backing positioned correctly, the IR NVG may be just the ticket.
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