I usually muster the courage to print RA-4 at home about once or twice every year. It's not a question of cost (colour paper is actually cheaper than B&W), but one of convenience. I have to buy 10L kits of both developer and blix, so it's only worth doing a decent-sized batch. Developer you have to mix all at once if you want accurate results and your chemicals to stay stable. Blix can be mixed only for each session, but it's not eternal either. The fixer part tends to crystallize pretty quickly (a matter of weeks).
I process in drums, so I maintain temperature with bottles in a water bath. Not perfect, but suitable for a 3-4 hour session. Still, the output of a printing session this way is much smaller than from a B&W session. You have to be very careful and watch out for small mistakes: once, I found out after a few crappy prints that the lume on my watch was sufficient to fog colour paper when close to it!
I always end up wasting some RA-4 developer and blix, because I usually exhaust my supply of negatives to print (or my patience) before I run out of chemicals. Paper can always keep in the freezer for the next batch, but you need the space.
That being said, I do think someone who is dedicated to analogue colour could be more efficient: having some cold storage for paper and chemicals, a JOBO kit, or at least an array of drums and rollers to facilitate batch processing, and also processing one's own C-41 could make the whole process something more enjoyable and productive than my limited setup. For that person, what is a matter of inconvenience or difficulty would only be par for the course.
If you really love the look of analogue RA-4 prints, there's no reason not to invest yourself as much as people who do B&W.
I process in drums, so I maintain temperature with bottles in a water bath. Not perfect, but suitable for a 3-4 hour session. Still, the output of a printing session this way is much smaller than from a B&W session. You have to be very careful and watch out for small mistakes: once, I found out after a few crappy prints that the lume on my watch was sufficient to fog colour paper when close to it!
I always end up wasting some RA-4 developer and blix, because I usually exhaust my supply of negatives to print (or my patience) before I run out of chemicals. Paper can always keep in the freezer for the next batch, but you need the space.
That being said, I do think someone who is dedicated to analogue colour could be more efficient: having some cold storage for paper and chemicals, a JOBO kit, or at least an array of drums and rollers to facilitate batch processing, and also processing one's own C-41 could make the whole process something more enjoyable and productive than my limited setup. For that person, what is a matter of inconvenience or difficulty would only be par for the course.
If you really love the look of analogue RA-4 prints, there's no reason not to invest yourself as much as people who do B&W.