real_liiva
Member
I recently got my hands on some very expired (expired in 1987 i believe, stored in room temp its entire life) ORWOCOLOR NC19 film. Spent the entire first roll and a bit of the second one cutting 6 exposure long strips to figure out exposure and development. The base fog on this film is really intense. I ended up settling on EI 3 which is almost a 5 stop overexposure compared to box speed. It's meant to be developed in the orwo c-5168 process, which is vaguely similar to the C22 process but uses CD1 as its developer. I obviously didnt have any of this on hand so i decided to process it in C41 at various times and temperatures. After playing around a while i settled on 8 minutes at 24C as my C41 development time and this seems to have worked well in combination with shooting at EI 3.
The curves were very crossed as well as there was there was a red shift but most of it could be corrected and the colors are otherwise seemingly proper (not accurate, but at least red is red, green is green and blue is blue).
It might be hard to tell in the compressed scans i attached, but despite the 5 stop pull the film has quite noticeable grain. I can't imagine how grainy it would be at box speed lol. I'm pretty sure this film isn't t grain or similar but just old cubic grain.
The curves were very crossed as well as there was there was a red shift but most of it could be corrected and the colors are otherwise seemingly proper (not accurate, but at least red is red, green is green and blue is blue).
It might be hard to tell in the compressed scans i attached, but despite the 5 stop pull the film has quite noticeable grain. I can't imagine how grainy it would be at box speed lol. I'm pretty sure this film isn't t grain or similar but just old cubic grain.