Today, I dropped off a few rolls of C-41 film at a lab for the first time in years. I felt like I was putting my child in the arms of a stranger.
That is all, really.
That is all, really.


Today, I dropped off a few rolls of C-41 film at a lab for the first time in years. I felt like I was putting my child in the arms of a stranger.
That is all, really.
You'd pay $20 at the very least per print. There's virtually no market for it. It's just far too labor intensive, and if you're running a lab, try finding someone who will slave away their hours in the dark making prints for your customers all day. It's a non-starter.few if any labs do real chemistry nowadays
You'd pay $20 at the very least per print. There's virtually no market for it. It's just far too labor intensive, and if you're running a lab, try finding someone who will slave away their hours in the dark making prints for your customers all day. It's a non-starter.
But it doesn't matter anyway, because the question whether the prints will be good doesn't depend on whether they were made with an enlarger or from scans. Good or awful prints can be made either way. Most labs will make prints in such a way that no or minimal human intervention is required, because humans = expensive and consumers overall don't want to pay much for their prints.
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