RJBender
RFF Sponsoring Member
Brian Sweeney said:There is a difference in dealing with a "side business" in a 5 and dime store and a professional lab. I quit Sam's club as Fuji's Processing, their contractor, had become so bad. They printed an entire roll out dark and of focus. I scanned a negative, and it was in focus. Brought into the store, they sent it back out to be redone. Talked to the "quality Control person". Came back properly exposed and out of focus. The Manager of the Photo department printed some for me on his machine, and sent it and my roll back for a third try stating the pictures were all in focus. Came back, in focus, properly exposed, scratched negatives.
Do Not use Fuji Processing.
Wal-Mart in the Midwest used to be better. My negatives were handled carefully and were never scratched. I quit using them two years ago because of all the scratches I started seeing on my negatives.
I switched to Sam's Club and they were doing a great job of handling my negatives. Recently, I got two rolls that were scratched but the prints were fine. The last two rolls I took in were for processing only and they didn't scratch the negatives.
Now I think it may be the machine doing the printing that's scratching my negatives. In some places, it looks like the emulsion is chipped. I suppose most people only get one set of prints and never use the negatives again. If they order prints later, the negatives are so scratched up the prints won't be any good.
Maybe some marketing guru determined that people are more likely to order doubles at the time of processing if the lab scratches up their negatives and makes it impossible to get good reprints later. Maybe the scratches are the result of inadequate machine maintenance or sloppy handling.
BTW, if you have 120 film developed by a pro lab, tell them you DON'T want them to cut your negatives. Several years ago I participated in a figure shoot at Stan Trampe's (click) studio. A few months later, I noticed that one of my negatives was missing. Ever since then, I tell the labs not to cut the negatives. They use a plastic sleeve and roll it up with a piece of tape.
R.J.