I'm not one for asking for threads to be closed, but Kodachrome threads are an exception. They are pointless and never end well.OMG, here we go again. I plead with a compassionate moderator to close the thread.
Please.
I'm not one for asking for threads to be closed, but Kodachrome threads are an exception. They are pointless and never end well.OMG, here we go again. I plead with a compassionate moderator to close the thread.
Please.
I'm not one for asking for threads to be closed, but Kodachrome threads are an exception. They are pointless and never end well.
I'm not one for asking for threads to be closed, but Kodachrome threads are an exception. They are pointless and never end well.
Second the motion.
It's heresy but - it isn't even worth it, even if it could happen. It was actually inferior to modern E6 films anyway.......Shoot the E6 we have left and enjoy it. Use one of the above heretical methods to mess with the colors from a scan and make it look similar if you really want to.
OMG, here we go again. I plead with a compassionate moderator to close the thread.
Please.
I despise Kodachrome, with a passion and energy that cannot be described by any known language. I hope to live long enough to see the day that the last festering remnant of this god forsaken craphole of a film is dead and forgotten.
Fewer things turn me off film than the relentless wishing for Kodachrome to come back. That and Kodachrome's incessant ability to turn otherwise intelligent people into raving, drooling maniacs. E6 film is DYING every day and somehow Kodachrome is going to be resurrected.
God I hate Kodachrome threads. I'd rather read from some digital fanatic bashing film than ANYTHING about Kodachrome.
I loved Kodachrome far more than any E6 film I ever used. If E6 is "Meat and Potatoes" then Kodachrome is that with a nice peppercorn gravy.
What Kodachrome is and will always be are the photographs that were made. If you do not have those, then you do not have a Kodachrome, period. So when one looks at it like that, not only are Kodachromes alive and well, they will likely outlive us all....
Don't hate Kodachrome, it was more than a film, that's why it still *is*....
View attachment 78940
But don't plan on using the film ever again, it will not happen.
People people...
...this thread was not meant to get everyone in a fight over Kodachrome. I just wanted to know if it could be reproduced or not. Be good to each other, it's Christmas.
If you would like to get an idea what processing Kodachrome is like, here is an exercise you can try. Reversal process a frame of B/W film using hair dye as the color developer. You need a hair dye that contains p-Phenylenediamine (PPD) and color couplers. These sort of dyes are pretty common - I used the brand "Touch of Gray" for my experiment. Most hair dye works on a similar principle as color film. (Or color film works on the same principle as hair dye.) The PPD will function as your color developer and the oxidized PPD will react with the coupler to form the dye.
I used a hand coated emulsion that I made. IDK if commercial film would work but it might. I was able to get a weak positive dye image. Maybe with tweaking and experimentation a better image would be possible. This worked the one time I tried it. YMMV.
Using one frame of film follow these steps:
1) Expose your frame in camera.
2) First develop the film using any developer you like. I used D-23. Under-developing might be a good idea.
3) Rinse the film
4) Now fog (or re-expose) using white light or a flash. I exposed for 3 minutes and this was likely way too long. If I did this again I'd use a flash. The re-exposure step make the remaining silver halides ready to be developed to metallic silver.
5) Mix your color developer. Fill a small container with DW. If your hair dye was in a tube like mine, put the tip of the tube under the surface of the water to avoid excess exposure to air. Squeeze some of the hair dye into the water. Top up the container if required and stir to mix. Don't worry about mixing too much because this mixture will not keep (sound familiar?). As the solution is exposed to air the PPD will oxidize and the coupler will couple with it and turn into dye, leaving the "developer" useless before long, say 20 minutes. Tightly covering the container will slow down the process.
6) Get the film into the "color developer." Leave the film in the color developer for about 15 minutes, agitating every once in a while. The PPD oxidizes by reducing the re-exposed halides. The oxidized developer reacts with the coupler to form the dye.
7) Pull the film out of the developer and rinse. The film will be totally black at this point.
8) Put the film into a bleach. You can use the C-22 ferricyanide type bleach found posted here on APUG. Let this sit for about 6 minutes or more.
9) Pull the film out of the bleach and rinse.
10) Put the film in a fixer and let all of the silver fix out.
11) After fixing, wash the film thoroughly and dry.
Any more questions on why nobody wants to do Kodachrome type processing? Remember steps 4 to 7 have to be repeated for all 3 colors if you can expose with the proper filters. Steps 4 to 8 have to be repeated if differential bleaching is being used.
After all that you should get a weak positive dye image. One problem is that hair dye often contains extra oxidizing agents and this, of course, causes all the gelatin to stain. I got this,
View attachment 78916
If you look hard, you can see the positive of the (fake) Macbeth chart I photographed. It has a white border and is on a clipboard. To the right is a box of washing soda, the "Touch of Gray" box, and a plastic bottle of isopropyl alcohol. You can barely make them out if you look really hard. Of course, the actual dye image is the brown that my hair used to be before I gave up on trying to color it.
Maybe someone could experiment and use funky colored cyan, yellow and magenta hair dye to pull off 3 color development. These colors are available. (You would find them in use in any high school.) I'm surely not saying "Kodachrome lovers of the world unite" but after a couple of cases of hair dye maybe it would work. As far as I am concerned, the fellow that managed to color process some K-64 was right on when he said to let the K-14 process rest in peace.
I have a roll if you want it![]()
Think about this..... Many people come here that are new to analog photography. Some young and holding a camera for the first time, others may be older and at a point in their lives that they now can afford and have the time to express their passions through photography. They come here and after hearing so much about the history, fantastic images, and stories about Kodachrome and other films. They want to try it out too! It doesn't matter that the "newer emulsions are better" or "shoot what E6 is left and enjoy it while you can." Negativity and bashing because "you are tired of reading these posts" will only drive away interest from analog photography and will eventually hasten the demise of the very reason this forum exists. Film.
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