So I use Cinestill C-41 chemicals because they're cheap and they work well enough for me. I shoot both 35mm and 120 color film, in a variety of speeds and emulsions. Mostly with 120 I've used brand-new Ektar 100, @ box speed, and expired, but refrigerated Fuji HG400. The Fuji expired in 1998, and I don't know how long it's been at room temperature vs. refrigerated by the previous owner, so I rate it @ 100 ASA and get similar results to the Ektar 100.
I'm very fastidious about exposure, and I'm quite sure I'm exposing these within an average one stop of the correct EV for the rated speed. On 35mm I get very nice-looking negatives.
On 120, my negatives always come out much thicker with much less clear lowlights and edges--almost as if I weren't bleaching or fixing enough. The final images come out... okay, I guess? Maybe not quite up to the standards of my 35mm images.
Now, the Cinestill kit has both in one bottle as a blix solution, which is used for 8 minutes at 102F. / 39C. with the same agitation as the development stage. Is this a case where the emulsion itself is thicker and I have to blix longer? Or what's going on?
I'm very fastidious about exposure, and I'm quite sure I'm exposing these within an average one stop of the correct EV for the rated speed. On 35mm I get very nice-looking negatives.
On 120, my negatives always come out much thicker with much less clear lowlights and edges--almost as if I weren't bleaching or fixing enough. The final images come out... okay, I guess? Maybe not quite up to the standards of my 35mm images.
Now, the Cinestill kit has both in one bottle as a blix solution, which is used for 8 minutes at 102F. / 39C. with the same agitation as the development stage. Is this a case where the emulsion itself is thicker and I have to blix longer? Or what's going on?