Minolta93
Member
I develop B&W film myself but have been sending my color film to the lab. I'm now considering the simplified CS41 kit from Cinestill, which is a 2-bath kit. Even if I only did 3 rolls with it I'd still save money over the lab, but I have some concerns about its temperature sensitivity. I don't have a way to control temperature at the moment but I do of course have a thermometer. I figure I'd use a hot water bath or something to keep the tank warm and start my chemistry off at the right temperature and hope that it doesn't cool down too much during developing.
I know this could cause color shifts but I'd like to know, how much? Let's say I use this chemistry kit, and I have a water bath at about the correct temp with my tank and chemistry in bottles in the tank. I'd control the temperature by adding hot tap water to the bath until it's at temp or slightly above, and then I'd just go ahead and process the film. I assume it might cool down a small amount during the process, but would this cooling be enough to ruin the negatives? Or would it cause minor color shifts which I may be able to live with, or maybe even cause practically no issues at all?
The next thing I'm concerned about is the shelf life. I read somewhere that Cinestill says it'll last for 2 months at most once mixed, is this true? And is there any way to extend this? I have seen people here talk about sealed bags for chemistry that can make, for example, xtol last a long time, but I don't understand if this would help a C41 blix, since to my knowledge the bleach and fix degrade one another and so maybe sealing it off from outside air wouldn't even help the longevity.
Another question I have about the longevity is if I can potentially mix up a smaller portion of powder instead of the entire kit. I understand that this would run the risk of different sized grains of powder in each batch causing chemistry changes but I'm curious if anyone has tried this before with the cinestill kit or with other chemistry and if it's doable, because if I could mix up a fractional batch then I wouldn't worry too much about the shelf life.
If anyone has any answers I would appreciate it.
I know this could cause color shifts but I'd like to know, how much? Let's say I use this chemistry kit, and I have a water bath at about the correct temp with my tank and chemistry in bottles in the tank. I'd control the temperature by adding hot tap water to the bath until it's at temp or slightly above, and then I'd just go ahead and process the film. I assume it might cool down a small amount during the process, but would this cooling be enough to ruin the negatives? Or would it cause minor color shifts which I may be able to live with, or maybe even cause practically no issues at all?
The next thing I'm concerned about is the shelf life. I read somewhere that Cinestill says it'll last for 2 months at most once mixed, is this true? And is there any way to extend this? I have seen people here talk about sealed bags for chemistry that can make, for example, xtol last a long time, but I don't understand if this would help a C41 blix, since to my knowledge the bleach and fix degrade one another and so maybe sealing it off from outside air wouldn't even help the longevity.
Another question I have about the longevity is if I can potentially mix up a smaller portion of powder instead of the entire kit. I understand that this would run the risk of different sized grains of powder in each batch causing chemistry changes but I'm curious if anyone has tried this before with the cinestill kit or with other chemistry and if it's doable, because if I could mix up a fractional batch then I wouldn't worry too much about the shelf life.
If anyone has any answers I would appreciate it.

