You cannot make a single part color developer or blix and you certainly cannot make a color monobath.
PE
I don't think I've ever heard of Eastman Kodak manufacturing anything that wasn't top-notch. You guys are making me uneasy. With EK knocked off as the big boy on the block, are we just going to get stuck with second-rate stuff?
As for the Kodak polaroids, they knew full well they were infringing on trademark. That WAS dumb.
I stand corrected. Better to be corrected by your betters and take it like a man, than to remain ignorant. Thank you. So what's the best chemical kit in April 2013 for the process herein? As an aside, I wonder if this Champion is the same one of the old Champion paper that I once bought so much of.
Thank you for the post Matt. No, it is not the same as Champion Paper formerly with a plant in Canton NC. And I looked up their RA4 chemistry. It is a 2-part process. I wonder who makes a process these days meeting PE's standards. I've got a backlog of color negatives, but don't want some amateur kit.
Yeah I remember the 110 cameras. My grandmother had a perfectly good X-15 and bought a 110. I had forgotten about the disc cameras. That was a bunch of junk. But think about it--the 126 Instamatics were the i-phone of the day. And I think we're seeing ipods and iphones grow tired now. What's AAPL going to do next? Every dog has his day. As for the Kodak polaroids, they knew full well they were infringing on trademark. That WAS dumb.
But back to these color processing kits--which is the good stuff NOW, and which is junk?
OK, thanks. I remember him not liking it on film, now that you mention it. But I figured it stands to reason... But some other guy on here claimed it gave yellow borders and dingy tones. The last RA4 I bought was Fuji Xtal Archive paper, and whatever house brand of chemistry at Freestyle at the time. It's been a couple years now. But in just those same few years, film and chemistry in general has slowed to a trickle. It's really getting tight out there. And I still have 25 more years to live. Wonder which will kick the bucket first--me or film.
. . . Polaroid won the patent case with a female judge . . .
and why bother worrying about blix in C41? Just buy the flexicolor product which is easily the best anyway, and be done with it.
Not sure, but I think that they did appeal and it was turned down. Someone else would have to verify this.
PE
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