- Joined
- Jul 11, 2014
- Messages
- 3
- Format
- 35mm
Hi all,
I recently purchased an Iloca Stereo Rapid (from a VM Camper festival of all places) that was pre-loaded with a roll of film that I'd like to try developing, so I'm after some hints to maximize my chances of getting something viewable off the film.
The canister is black metal with silver endcaps, and is labelled as Ilford FP4. It's been reloaded though, as I opened the back on the camera before I knew it was loaded, and I could see that the film was taped onto the leader. I appreciate that the last part of the film was ruined btw, I'm hoping that the images (if there are any) from the start of the roll will have been protected. There is a small sticker on the canister with "50s" written on it.
I've only got Tetenal Paranol S dev available, which I understand is similar to Rodinal. I don't want to purchase any additional chemicals, this is just for fun and curiosity rather than any great need to produce archival quality images.
So, all hints, tips, suggestions welcome.
Thanks in advance,
Rich.
I recently purchased an Iloca Stereo Rapid (from a VM Camper festival of all places) that was pre-loaded with a roll of film that I'd like to try developing, so I'm after some hints to maximize my chances of getting something viewable off the film.
The canister is black metal with silver endcaps, and is labelled as Ilford FP4. It's been reloaded though, as I opened the back on the camera before I knew it was loaded, and I could see that the film was taped onto the leader. I appreciate that the last part of the film was ruined btw, I'm hoping that the images (if there are any) from the start of the roll will have been protected. There is a small sticker on the canister with "50s" written on it.
I've only got Tetenal Paranol S dev available, which I understand is similar to Rodinal. I don't want to purchase any additional chemicals, this is just for fun and curiosity rather than any great need to produce archival quality images.
So, all hints, tips, suggestions welcome.
Thanks in advance,
Rich.

