Is this good develop E6?

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Rhodes

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I ask more in line of "are the chemicals still good?" because of my previous thread. When I pick the tetenal kit (opned 4 or 5 months ago and half full) to do the working solutions, the FD was dark yellow with deposits. I decided to do a test with a agfa precisa 100 roll, since I got 5 this week. This are the results:









For me they apper fine and now I am thinking fo developing the slide films that I have waiting for it. But want to ask your opinion first.
 

thegman

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Looks fine to me, but I'm paranoid, so I'd probably do each roll at a time to make sure they are OK individually.
 

PhotoJim

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It's hard to tell from a scan because it's the colour balance that will be most affected.
 

stefan4u

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EASmithV

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In my limited experience E6 doesn't just up and die. It slowly starts shifting to give more and more magenta. You'll know when its dying.
 

Lamar

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Color balance

Agreed, I had a roll of E100G I decided to develop in 4 or 5 month old Kodak E6 chemicals just to see what effect it would have. The roll was distinctly yellowish and under developed even though I added developer time. I was still able to correct after scanning although they looked pretty rough on a light table.

It's hard to tell from a scan because it's the colour balance that will be most affected.
 

stefan4u

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Formally colour shifts can be best recognized on a light table. Especially if you compare the questionable film strip with others, well developed films. What scanner / scanner software are doing with films depends on their “targets” an is a different story.

The benefit of projecting is, that the human eye does permanent a kind of automatic white balance anyway. That’s why I asked weather projected or not. A slight colour shift will be corrected automatically, in opposite to an colour crossover…

Again I would say your slides will project marvellous, especially the fourth which have a nice combination of perspective and stunning sky. This really looks like you had fun taking that picture, and this way it should be. Don’t be to picky with minor colour shifts, “unnatural” shifts really look a lot different. Have a eye on the Jobo E6 manual, (or try a complete homebrew of chemicals). Than you may see some significant shifts and crossovers :smile:

Regards Stefan
 
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