The instructions give the standard steps…
In that case, you need to add the first two steps. As a chemistry for the first, you could try two tablespoons of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) - probably not as effective as Kodak recommends, but it will do the trick.
I'm doing pre-soak all the time for C41 film in Bellini kit. The reason is that I want to make sure the tank and film are around 100F when I pour in the color developers so the temperature and time will be correct.
In conclusion, I ignored Bellini's instruction of "no pre-soak" with no ill effect for over one year now.
Hydrogen Peroxide bottles are brown, plastic, available in small to large sizes, including convenient one liter bottle.
The pours are average but they are good quality and can be had inexpensively, with H²O², a good bathroom cleaner.
I'm doing pre-soak all the time for C41 film in Bellini kit. The reason is that I want to make sure the tank and film are around 100F when I pour in the color developers so the temperature and time will be correct.
In conclusion, I ignored Bellini's instruction of "no pre-soak" with no ill effect for over one year now.
He added 45secs to the dev.
That's a massive increase that constitutes about a 1.5 stop push it so. As virtually always, it'll produce an I age and it'll scan OK, but the color balance will shift, crossover increases and so does granularity. There's no good reason to do this the way I see it.
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