LeicaFoReVer
Addicted to Rangefinders
I think yes but I want to be 100% sure. Can you help me?
If your B&W film is C-41, yes, without a doubt.
If not, I'm not sure either, but I do know that developing and fixing C-41 film with conventional B&W chemicals is possible, but not recommended, as the image will fade over time (C-41 process is "dye-based" whereas traditional B&W is "silver/salt based" --to extremely simplify things)
C41 fixer is usually a combined "Bleach/Fix" whose purpose is also to remove silver, so the simple answer with conventional B&W film is "no". (All you'll get is a clear, blank strip of film base.)
C41 fixer is usually a combined "Bleach/Fix" whose purpose is also to remove silver, so the simple answer with conventional B&W film is "no". (All you'll get is a clear, blank strip of film base.)
Right where most common amateur and minilab ready kits are concerned. The genuine C-41 and E-6 from Kodak as well as most competing large scale processes use a separate bleach and fix (where the fix is the same as some marketed for black and white), as blix is rather short-lived which makes it a poor choice for long-term economic replenishment.
Fresh fixer from a separate bleach and fix system can be used for black and white - as long as it has never been used for a colour run, as bleach carryover (harmless for chromogenic images) might affect the black and white silver image.
But as used colour film fixer may damage black and white silver images and blixes (usually recognizable by being red or brown) will even completely obliterate them, you'd better ignore the above exception and stay clear of all and any "colour fixer", unless you exactly know what you are doing...
hey tlitody is that dog a dogo argentino ?