- Joined
- Mar 2, 2007
- Messages
- 1,464
- Format
- Medium Format
I own and operate a small pro lab in Sydney australia.
Many of my clients either travel overseas or are based over
seas and send their work to me. I have noticed a pattern relating to emulsions which I am hoping someone else may have noticed or have some idea as to
weather what I am noticing is coincidence or has a science behind it.
When I get mixtures of films including Black and white emulsions and colour E-6, C-41 emulsions I find if they have been exposed to a damaging level of X-rays
there is a trend for the black and whites to be damaged most often followed by lesser damage on the c-41 and then rarely on E-6.
This observation has made me wonder is this just a coincidence in my lab? or is there a science behind black and white emulsions being more sensitive to X-ray damage, c-41 less so and E-6 less so again?
If so can someone explain this too me? as ive noticed this pattern often.
~Steve Frizza
The Lighthouse Lab
Many of my clients either travel overseas or are based over
seas and send their work to me. I have noticed a pattern relating to emulsions which I am hoping someone else may have noticed or have some idea as to
weather what I am noticing is coincidence or has a science behind it.
When I get mixtures of films including Black and white emulsions and colour E-6, C-41 emulsions I find if they have been exposed to a damaging level of X-rays
there is a trend for the black and whites to be damaged most often followed by lesser damage on the c-41 and then rarely on E-6.
This observation has made me wonder is this just a coincidence in my lab? or is there a science behind black and white emulsions being more sensitive to X-ray damage, c-41 less so and E-6 less so again?
If so can someone explain this too me? as ive noticed this pattern often.
~Steve Frizza
The Lighthouse Lab
