I've got a few rolls of exposed E-6 film (120), a couple more waiting to be exposed, and a hankering.
I'm already set up to develop C-41, meaning I have bleach, fixer, and final rinse (though it's not a formalin generating or carrying stabilizer, I can make up one of those if needed).
Cinestill sells their E-6 color developer separately from their kit (likely because even their blix has a much longer working life than the color dev), but I've been warned (by a YouTube user replying to a comment, so limited credibility) that the Cinestill first dev is prone to produce a blue cast in the final transparency on any film other than very fresh E100 -- with a claim that that's a well known sign of first dev problems.
The same YouTube user then went on to say using Dektol as a first dev is one of the stupidest things he's heard of.
We all know the first developer for E-6 is basically a black and white developer, specifically one that doesn't produce any dyes as oxidation products (so not a PPD derivative, I'd expect, though I've heard anecdotally of people getting faint dye images with Xtol on color films). Generally, my understanding was that you wanted pretty high contrast from the first dev (hence why it's canonically 6+ minutes at 100+ F -- equivalent to 19:30 at standard 68 F), but the complaint was, in part, that you'd "blow out the contrast" as well as losing Dmax due to lack of restrainer.
All that to ask: what's expected from an E-6 first developer, presuming that the Cinestill products aren't reliable? Or what else could have caused someone to think those devs don't work well (offhand, I was thinking light fogging during loading, temperature issues, or partially exhausted color dev)?
I'm already set up to develop C-41, meaning I have bleach, fixer, and final rinse (though it's not a formalin generating or carrying stabilizer, I can make up one of those if needed).
Cinestill sells their E-6 color developer separately from their kit (likely because even their blix has a much longer working life than the color dev), but I've been warned (by a YouTube user replying to a comment, so limited credibility) that the Cinestill first dev is prone to produce a blue cast in the final transparency on any film other than very fresh E100 -- with a claim that that's a well known sign of first dev problems.
The same YouTube user then went on to say using Dektol as a first dev is one of the stupidest things he's heard of.
We all know the first developer for E-6 is basically a black and white developer, specifically one that doesn't produce any dyes as oxidation products (so not a PPD derivative, I'd expect, though I've heard anecdotally of people getting faint dye images with Xtol on color films). Generally, my understanding was that you wanted pretty high contrast from the first dev (hence why it's canonically 6+ minutes at 100+ F -- equivalent to 19:30 at standard 68 F), but the complaint was, in part, that you'd "blow out the contrast" as well as losing Dmax due to lack of restrainer.
All that to ask: what's expected from an E-6 first developer, presuming that the Cinestill products aren't reliable? Or what else could have caused someone to think those devs don't work well (offhand, I was thinking light fogging during loading, temperature issues, or partially exhausted color dev)?
