[QUOTE="pocketshaver,
Developing your own film can be fun, it CAN be affordable. However MOST of us do not shoot enough film to make the purchase of a Noritsu or Frontier scanner feasible or the purchase of a professional grade mini lab developing system. Nor does shooting say 2 rolls of film a month or even per week make the cost of those 130 dollar develop at home kits, the purchase of heater equipment for color film, or the purchase of chemicals worth while[/QUOTE]
I don't know who that "us" is.
"Worth while" is entirely subjective ...what's far too expensive for a child or homeless person isn't expensive for somebody further along in life. A stainless Nikor tank and Nikor reel (mine are ancient) is enough to process any color negative or color slide film...no need for heater equipment if you're not living on the street. Many of us have printed color of various types in temporary bathroom darkrooms, some for years (I did Kodak color neg, Kodak color pos,, Agfacolor, Cibachrome, and B&W) .
When I moved from CA to NM I had been used to same day processing of chrome (even Kodachrome from the fine regional EK lab). I was used to very fine quality CA lab work. Under pressure from family, when I got here, I shot a wedding and discovered that prints took forever and were terrible at best (later I discovered that we actually had a good lab). That SNAFU led me immediately to purchase an inexpensive Epson flatbed scanner and excellent Epson 2200 printer in order to make reasonable prints for the now-divorced bride...I still relied on a lab for color film processing but had to learn how to inkjet print letter size and 13X19 to reasonable standard (to my taste, as well). Epson's new archival pigments had just arrived on the scene, a historic blessing for color photography. Bought and still use a Nikon scanner, replaced Epson printer with Canon, putting an end to clogs.