Hey all, so I've been developing my own color negative film at home for a few months (using many of the guides from this forum, so thanks!) and I've had my first really bizarre, incomprehensible failure that I'm hoping someone can provide some insight into so I can avoid it in the future.
I have a bunch of 120 that I'm trying to get through from a recent trip, and I was attempting to develop two rolls (1 x portra 400 and 1 x ektar 100) on a single paterson reel. I had a really hard time getting them on, and I think the film got a bit bent and may have overlapped and touched in some places during development, but the images otherwise came out ok (they're still drying, so some weirdness may crop up when I scan, but they look relatively normal). The real problem arose when I tried to do my third roll of the night. I gave up on the two rolls per reel idea and loaded a roll of Cinestill 800 120 on my other reel (note that I did not re-use the reel from the first attempt). Everything seemed to go smoothly, but when I pulled the film out, there were giant blue/green blotches all over it, and most of the images were ruined. Looking back and my first two rolls, one of them also had a few blue-green blotches that I had chalked up to the films touching or overlapping during development.
My process for both runs was the same. I mixed up a liter of Flexicolor developer, used half for the first batch and half for the second. I use a sous-vide machine to heat up all my chemicals to 100F, and I stick a thermometer in the developer so I know when it's ready. I do two one-minute pre-soaks, then developer for 3:15, stop bath for maybe 30 secs, then rinse the tank our 4-5 times. I bleach for 6:30, rinse for 3:15, fix for 6:30, rinse for 3:15, final rinse for 1:15 and soak in photo-flo for a minute.
The only thing I really changed this time around was I opened the tank after fixing to rinse before the final rinse.
Here are a few images of the Cinestill roll:
Here's a shot of the two rolls I did together. Note the similar greenish stain on the roll on the right.
Any clues as to what went wrong would be much appreciated! I'm a little hesitant to keep developing until I know what went wrong.
I have a bunch of 120 that I'm trying to get through from a recent trip, and I was attempting to develop two rolls (1 x portra 400 and 1 x ektar 100) on a single paterson reel. I had a really hard time getting them on, and I think the film got a bit bent and may have overlapped and touched in some places during development, but the images otherwise came out ok (they're still drying, so some weirdness may crop up when I scan, but they look relatively normal). The real problem arose when I tried to do my third roll of the night. I gave up on the two rolls per reel idea and loaded a roll of Cinestill 800 120 on my other reel (note that I did not re-use the reel from the first attempt). Everything seemed to go smoothly, but when I pulled the film out, there were giant blue/green blotches all over it, and most of the images were ruined. Looking back and my first two rolls, one of them also had a few blue-green blotches that I had chalked up to the films touching or overlapping during development.
My process for both runs was the same. I mixed up a liter of Flexicolor developer, used half for the first batch and half for the second. I use a sous-vide machine to heat up all my chemicals to 100F, and I stick a thermometer in the developer so I know when it's ready. I do two one-minute pre-soaks, then developer for 3:15, stop bath for maybe 30 secs, then rinse the tank our 4-5 times. I bleach for 6:30, rinse for 3:15, fix for 6:30, rinse for 3:15, final rinse for 1:15 and soak in photo-flo for a minute.
The only thing I really changed this time around was I opened the tank after fixing to rinse before the final rinse.
Here are a few images of the Cinestill roll:


Here's a shot of the two rolls I did together. Note the similar greenish stain on the roll on the right.

Any clues as to what went wrong would be much appreciated! I'm a little hesitant to keep developing until I know what went wrong.
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