Kodak Gold 200 - Green?

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Kirks518

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So I was at my local lab picking up some film, and happened to see someone else's roll hanging waiting to be picked up. It was green. Really green. I asked about it, and they had no idea why it was green. It was a roll of Kodak Gold 200, and even the rebate was a bright green. It was developed (dip & dunk) in the same batch as mine (and others), and everyone else's film looked just fine.

I figured out of curiosity, I'd ask here as to why/how this could happen. They didn't know what could have caused it, but I figured if anyone would, it would be someone here.
 

BrianShaw

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That happened to me once with some very old "found" film. It had been in a camera for at least 8 years, maybe more. It was ghastly looking - dark green, everything including the rebate. The lab said it was exposure to solvents. Anything is possible since I think it wa s stored in a closet with mothballs... And who knows what other peculiar storage conditions it endured. There were faint images under the green but not worth trying to recover.
 
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Kirks518

Kirks518

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PE - their darkroom is truly dark. I don't think they use a safelight.

Brian - That's what I was guessing, crazy old and improperly stored film. Crazy how green it was!
 

BrianShaw

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Deep emerald green. It made me jump when I first saw it. Crazy green!
 

bvy

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Some of my E6 cross-processed film comes out green. We're sure it was Kodacolor? Agree that old found film never comes out bright orange, but usually tends toward a dark red or muddy black in my experience.
 

Photo Engineer

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PE - their darkroom is truly dark. I don't think they use a safelight.

Brian - That's what I was guessing, crazy old and improperly stored film. Crazy how green it was!

The keeping could have been wrong or the customer could have fogged it somehow.

PE
 
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