loneranger
Well-known
It does, but none of these films look/feel like Tri-X. Not even close.
To the OP, if you want the Tri-X look, shoot Tri-X. There are plenty of places that process it, you may have to mail it to them. I do that in LA, even though I have local places I much prefer the results of the lab I mail it to.
If it is worth it to you, make the effort.
:angel:
What lab do you use?
Yup. All it takes as some numb-knutz in finance (read newly minted MBA from UofR) decides that they are not making enough money to keep the production line open.
Is this really how it happens?
Timmyjoe
Veteran
If you just want to process your own B&W, not print it, that is super simple and doesn't require a darkroom. And surprisingly little equipment. I process B&W in my office, while I'm working on my computer with a bathroom down the hall. Use Rodinal or HC-110, both one shot.
I've got an old cake pan, that I put on my desk to catch any drip-age, and have at it. Really is simple. Look into it.
I've got an old cake pan, that I put on my desk to catch any drip-age, and have at it. Really is simple. Look into it.
bhop73
Well-known
I used to develop TriX in my bathroom, it was messy , I'm not going back to that !
What kind of techniques were you doing that was messy? I develop a couple rolls a month in my kitchen sink mess free.
GarageBoy
Well-known
How is it messy? I put the film in a dark tent with my tank, load it, take it out, and after, you're just pouring liquids in and out of a tank - wear gloves if you're afraid of touching the chemicals
It's less messy than cooking
It's less messy than cooking
Huss
Veteran
What lab do you use?
For real B&W (not c41 process) and E6 I use www.northcoastphoto.com
For c41 colour I use www.thefindlab.com
Both are as good as each other, but northcoast is much cheaper for B&W and E6, while thefindlab is cheaper for c41.
I've had horrible results from thedarkroom.com and samys
philipus
ʎɐpɹəʇɥƃı&
I would also advise to develop yourself at home. It's fun and easy and doesn't take much time or space. And if you go for something like Diafine it becomes a complete breeze because there is no dilution to figure out, nor will the results vary depending on the temperature.
I have given up Tri-X because it curls so badly (where I live; apparently it depends on among other things air humidity). Instead I shoot Double-X which I like both because of how it looks and how well it takes over- and under-exposure. Just a few thoughts.
I have given up Tri-X because it curls so badly (where I live; apparently it depends on among other things air humidity). Instead I shoot Double-X which I like both because of how it looks and how well it takes over- and under-exposure. Just a few thoughts.
loneranger
Well-known
Thanks for all the great advise; I am going to try developing some on my own, since it sounds easy enough. When I said it was messy when I used to do it in my bathroom, I was referring to processing and printing, but just processing is actually all I need now.
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