alspix
Member
- Joined
- May 3, 2006
- Messages
- 8
- Format
- Plastic Cameras
Bringing the thread back to life again....
I have been experimenting with Nova Prospeed C41 (available in the UK, about £12 for 1 litre, 12 film dry kit). I mixed up, and divided into two 500ml batches, freezing one. The first batch I used for probably three times the specified number of films, varying types and speeds. The mixed chems were given a 2 weeks shelf life, I kept them longer, (in 500ml plastic bottles, squeezed to expel air, at room temperature) and tried then every now and again, hoping that at some point they would start producing some interesting results.
They were mixed in March 2006, yes ONE YEAR ago, and I have just run two more films through them, guesstimating an extra minute development time and doubling the blix time. I'm still getting very usable negatives! I wouldn't like to make any judgements on the colour accuracy, but lets just say I was a little dissapointed not to get more whacky results!! In fact, they look very reasonable indeed (especially given that one of my test films expired in 1999!)
The developer is now more or less black, but from my experience most of the colour the developer assumes is from the disolved anti-halation layer (which is very dense with some films, especially it seems kodak)
I will write all this up and blog it soon with some examples.
I have been experimenting with Nova Prospeed C41 (available in the UK, about £12 for 1 litre, 12 film dry kit). I mixed up, and divided into two 500ml batches, freezing one. The first batch I used for probably three times the specified number of films, varying types and speeds. The mixed chems were given a 2 weeks shelf life, I kept them longer, (in 500ml plastic bottles, squeezed to expel air, at room temperature) and tried then every now and again, hoping that at some point they would start producing some interesting results.
They were mixed in March 2006, yes ONE YEAR ago, and I have just run two more films through them, guesstimating an extra minute development time and doubling the blix time. I'm still getting very usable negatives! I wouldn't like to make any judgements on the colour accuracy, but lets just say I was a little dissapointed not to get more whacky results!! In fact, they look very reasonable indeed (especially given that one of my test films expired in 1999!)
The developer is now more or less black, but from my experience most of the colour the developer assumes is from the disolved anti-halation layer (which is very dense with some films, especially it seems kodak)
I will write all this up and blog it soon with some examples.