After success in using C-41 reversal on Phoenix as shown in the thread here: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/slide-with-harman-phoenix-200.212735/#post-2883004
I tried to do the same steps with Aerocolor (Flic Film Elektra 100). The roll was a little short, I only got 35 frames in my Canon Elan 7E which normally does 36 with plenty of film to spare.
The process is:
HC-110 1+19 6.5 minutes 38C
Expose to fluorescent tube 2 minutes on each side of reel for reversal while submerged in water
C-41 developer 3 minutes 38C
C-41 blix 5 minutes 38C
All the chemicals are relatively fresh and recently tested.
I shot it with mirror lockup on a tripod with a +/- 1 stop bracket, so at ISO 8, 16, and 32. The shots at 32 came out the most detailed. But they're also positively wacky. What is going on here? See below. It appears that the darker areas successfully reversed, but the lighter ones stayed negative, and there is a strong edge effect between them.
Straight out of camera with no color or contrast changes (ISO 32):
With black point set and a little green added, the midtones look realistic:
But the sky and ice highlights turn green and appear to still be negative.
The bracketed shots at other ISOs have a different cutoff for when the edge effect starts. The one at ISO 16 has the dam a similar green as the sky, and the one at ISO 8 loses detail in the dam and sky completely (all green and no clouds visible).
The film base is brownish, not clear. Why such different results than with Phoenix? What should I do to improve it?
I tried to do the same steps with Aerocolor (Flic Film Elektra 100). The roll was a little short, I only got 35 frames in my Canon Elan 7E which normally does 36 with plenty of film to spare.
The process is:
HC-110 1+19 6.5 minutes 38C
Expose to fluorescent tube 2 minutes on each side of reel for reversal while submerged in water
C-41 developer 3 minutes 38C
C-41 blix 5 minutes 38C
All the chemicals are relatively fresh and recently tested.
I shot it with mirror lockup on a tripod with a +/- 1 stop bracket, so at ISO 8, 16, and 32. The shots at 32 came out the most detailed. But they're also positively wacky. What is going on here? See below. It appears that the darker areas successfully reversed, but the lighter ones stayed negative, and there is a strong edge effect between them.
Straight out of camera with no color or contrast changes (ISO 32):
With black point set and a little green added, the midtones look realistic:
But the sky and ice highlights turn green and appear to still be negative.
The bracketed shots at other ISOs have a different cutoff for when the edge effect starts. The one at ISO 16 has the dam a similar green as the sky, and the one at ISO 8 loses detail in the dam and sky completely (all green and no clouds visible).
The film base is brownish, not clear. Why such different results than with Phoenix? What should I do to improve it?