Can you develop colour film in Black and white chemicals?

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wilper

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I tried Fuji C200 in Maco Ecoprint B/W chem (1+12, 5 min, 20C) and I got some pictures on the roll at least.

You can see the results here:
https://photofying.wordpress.com/2012/11/09/experiments-with-film-roll-4

Keep in mind that I'm a beginner at this whole film development stuff, so I may have gotten worse than necessary results due to mistakes in other parts of the process.

I see that I draw some traffic to the blog through here, so there's some interest in this kind of cross processing. I did another roll yesterday, and scanned it as colour negative film. The results can be seen here: https://photofying.wordpress.com/2012/11/28/experiments-with-film-roll-11/
 

leon bren

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Not quite the same. but an Ebay purchase of paper gave me some boxes of AgfaColor of indeterminate age. This sort of develops quite well in normal b&w chemistry and liths very well - perhaps it needs a bit more exposure to bring up the contrast. The prints come out with a rather brownish colour (sort of like sepia toning). No sign of fogging under a sodium vapour safelight either. Fun to do occasionally, although no real advantage (other than the boxes of paper are sitting there) than the regular stuff one might use.

Leon Bren
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mnemosyne

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Not quite the same. but an Ebay purchase of paper gave me some boxes of AgfaColor of indeterminate age. This sort of develops quite well in normal b&w chemistry and liths very well - perhaps it needs a bit more exposure to bring up the contrast. The prints come out with a rather brownish colour (sort of like sepia toning). No sign of fogging under a sodium vapour safelight either. Fun to do occasionally, although no real advantage (other than the boxes of paper are sitting there) than the regular stuff one might use.

Leon Bren
Ballarat

Current CN papers don't have enough silver in them to form a solid black when developed in b&w developer, at least that is my experience. The darkest tone I was able to get was a Kodak gray card kind of gray, which makes them kind of useless for normal pictorial use. But maybe I did something wrong or older CN papers had a higher silver content. What is the exact designation of the paper you used?
 

removed account4

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It’s called a “necro”.
Maybe, but at least it is still relevant . Plenty of people have c4t1 and e6 film thta they don't
want to spend 10$ to have it processed or processed and not sent back the negatives :whistling:
developing the film in b/w developer and scanning it is an easy solution and it works great. I have
a whole bunch of Velveeta ( the old and good stuff ) and Portra 160 sheet film that i will be doing this to in the months to come.
If you use Caffenol the stain helps mask the orange and yellow masks.

YMMV
 

Photo Chemist

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Yes. I've done it. But I don't remember what chemicals I used (I really need to take better notes). I do remember that a pre-soak was involved. I developed a roll of Kodak Gold 200. It was in the camera when it was gifted to me. Before sticking in another roll, I wanted to see if it still worked. The orange mask was still there. A faint image could be seen when held up to the light, and when scanned a definite image was seen. The negatives needed a bit of help in LR, since they were rather thin. Here's one (unedited and edited).

2-July 28, 2018_2018-07-28-008-3.jpg
2-July 28, 2018_2018-07-28-008.jpg
as
 
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