Thanks for your reply, please see my latest reply to Kodaks
Whenever I see Mobberly, I think of this:
So I'm always surprised by your American cinema references!![]()

LOL, I see what you did thereSome day soon we are bound to have someone join us on Photrio who is called Harmon.
Yes I too have always wondered about his background![]()
Some day soon we are bound to have someone join us on Photrio who is called Harmon. Just imagine the confusion then
pentaxuser
OK, your processing sounds OK. I have heard occasional complaints related to final rinse/stabilizer. You could try to process a roll and skip that step, and just do a final rinse in demineralized/distilled water with some photoflo.
Assume that all information is relevant.
I used the same method again, with fresh chemicals and unexpired Kodak Gold 200 for a quick test. I processed it using a Nikor stainless steel tank following the Ilfcolor instructions: 3 minutes 15 seconds for development, 6 minutes 30 seconds for bleaching, and 4 minutes 20 seconds for fixing. After pouring in the bleach, I accidentally dropped the cap, which caused a delay of a few seconds before I started agitation. For the final wash, I used filtered water at 30°C with the Ilford wash method, extending it to 8 cycles. I finished with Photo Flo and distilled water for the final rinse. However, some speckle-like spots still appeared and could not be washed off, even after trying to clean them with ethanol. There are some of these speckle-like spots on both the emulsion side and the base side, with the base side being more obvious and severe.
Try without the photoflo. The problem does seem a lot less pronounced than it was before.
Please note that dust can also drop onto the film as it dries. Sometimes, a problem like this really is a matter of picking the best place in your home to dry the film in and then ensure there's as little airflow/disturbance in that room as possible to prevent kicking up dust.
Try without the photoflo. The problem does seem a lot less pronounced than it was before.
Please note that dust can also drop onto the film as it dries. Sometimes, a problem like this really is a matter of picking the best place in your home to dry the film in and then ensure there's as little airflow/disturbance in that room as possible to prevent kicking up dust.
Well, if that's the case, I'd put my money on the fixer rather than the bleach. But in the first try you mentioned you used fresh bleach that wasn't used before. I don't see how that would throw down this precipitate.
Did you try soaking a strip of film in a weak acid solution and then wash it again?
It would be the first time I'd see something resembling corrosion or pits on C41 film. It's most likely little bumps that look differently due to a trick of the light.Under reflected light, these marks look more like indentations or signs of corrosion.
It would be the first time I'd see something resembling corrosion or pits on C41 film. It's most likely little bumps that look differently due to a trick of the light.
Try the acid soak, see if they disappear.
thanks again!Yes, definitely; it's really odd though. I kind of hope that the problem will go away if you use other chemistry as it would be an easy solution. But often, problems like these are related to other process factors like the wash sequence combined with wash water quality, contamination of tanks/drums etc.
No problem, I hope you'll find a solution! It's super frustrating when this happens; everything looks fine until you slap the negatives onto the scanner or enlarger and boom...white zits everywhere.
If it's any consolation, I had the same thing happening on a roll of Vision3 the other day. Processed two rolls in the same tank; one was unaffected, the other wasn't. I cut a corner in the final wash sequence and was 'rewarded' by more or less the same problem you're having here. I'll have to re-wash those negatives.
I don't think either of these factors explains it, really. The mixing issue would only be an issue if you started with powdered chemistry and it somehow wouldn't dissolve. But C41 chemistry typically comes as liquid concentrates, so it's already dissolved. Agitation certainly isnt' a cause for this.
I don't think either of these factors explains it, really. The mixing issue would only be an issue if you started with powdered chemistry and it somehow wouldn't dissolve. But C41 chemistry typically comes as liquid concentrates, so it's already dissolved. Agitation certainly isnt' a cause for this.
I can confirm that the spots appeared during the fixer step. Today I received Kodak chemicals, and after the bleach step, the negatives looked clean with no suspicious spots. However, after two washes and fixing, followed by rinsing with distilled water, I saw similar spots, almost identical to what I experienced before with Ilfocolor.
| Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |
