Hey JD; Thanks for the info. I've been putting off replying because I wanted to do some reading on my own. The fact is, you've used some terms here that I think I should know.. if not through actual experience at least through extrapolation. Unfortunately, my reading just raised more questions than it answered.
"Cast" is easy enough, (I think); that would be the overall effect of cross-processing a given film. ie., a greenish cast, or pinkish, etc. (please correct me if I'm mistaken)
Curve crossover... that one I'm not so sure about. Would that be the characteristic way each dye colour reacts across the exposure envelope? I'm assuming that there would be the "normal" curve for normal chemistry, and a somewhat different curve for cross-processing. (especially at the toe and shoulder) The use of appropriate filters would emphasize these colour shifts. (I'm just thinking out loud... feel free to correct my assumptions.) This is why for normally processed films (especially slides) you aim for exposures dead in the middle of the curve, where elements are most consistent. If that is the case, would it not be preferable to target cross-processed exposures on the toe or shoulder of the curves where it is more likely that tonal responses will be out of synch? And if so, are there films that bear underexposure better than overexposure?
As I said... I'm just thinking out loud here. At worst, there are some idiotic assumptions that you can blast away at. In the end, I'll know more than when I started.
Cheers,
Tom
I'll amend my original question here. Instead of "...is there any film/filter/process combination that might produce similar results to Kodak's EIR?" how about "What known film/filter/exposure/process combination produces the most other-worldly results in cross-processed chemistry?"