FilmOnly
Member
I am on the brink of selling all of my beloved film gear and switching to the "d" word. After years of searching for a suitable processing solution, I remain perplexed and dismayed. It all "came to a head" yesterday, after Target's film developing machine ruined a roll of 36--giving all of my exposures a strange (and awful) sky blue tint. They refunded my money, but this marked the latest of a long string of problems.
I have tried mailing my film to a "better" (and expensive) photo lab, Specialty Color Services in CA. After a few good rolls, they sent one back with some specs and/or small scratches on it. I mentioned this in my notes, and ended up getting a roll back with two scratches through it from about exposure 29 onward. I was so deflated I did not even bother complaining. Prior to this, I used an upscale camera shop's photo lab (Penn Camera). They never made any long scratches on my work, but I did have a few specs here and there (which they reprinted for me). They also charged a tad more than Specialty, and are about an hour drive from my home. I live in a rural area.
I am tired of all of this. I want careful and painstaking work to be preserved and respected in processing. I bought my wife a little Nikon P60. She printed 72 photos yesterday (without using any crazy post production software), and they are scratch-free and look pretty good. If she had printed 100 or more, it would have cost less than two rolls of 36.
I feel like I have tried everything, with the exception doing my own developing and printing. I have not tried this because I do not want to breathe in chemicals--or have to worry about disposing them, either. I would appreaciate any advice, as I am on the brink of choosing a d*****l kit today and calling KEH, et. al. tomorrow.
I have tried mailing my film to a "better" (and expensive) photo lab, Specialty Color Services in CA. After a few good rolls, they sent one back with some specs and/or small scratches on it. I mentioned this in my notes, and ended up getting a roll back with two scratches through it from about exposure 29 onward. I was so deflated I did not even bother complaining. Prior to this, I used an upscale camera shop's photo lab (Penn Camera). They never made any long scratches on my work, but I did have a few specs here and there (which they reprinted for me). They also charged a tad more than Specialty, and are about an hour drive from my home. I live in a rural area.
I am tired of all of this. I want careful and painstaking work to be preserved and respected in processing. I bought my wife a little Nikon P60. She printed 72 photos yesterday (without using any crazy post production software), and they are scratch-free and look pretty good. If she had printed 100 or more, it would have cost less than two rolls of 36.
I feel like I have tried everything, with the exception doing my own developing and printing. I have not tried this because I do not want to breathe in chemicals--or have to worry about disposing them, either. I would appreaciate any advice, as I am on the brink of choosing a d*****l kit today and calling KEH, et. al. tomorrow.