question about C-41 kit for home developing

Omerhecht

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Feb 21, 2011
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Hi all,

i shoot LF and also with a mamiya 7.
I am looking in to starting doing my own C-41 (color) film processing at home.
needless to say i do all my BW and want to get in to color as well.
does any one have any experience? i have a small jobo machine i am thinking of using for this.
My question is about the developers, i found one on ebay (item number 280623661733) - can any say if this is any good?

any other ideas are welcome!

thanks!
 
Can't tell from the auction what brand the chemicals are.

A very popular C-41 kit is the Rollei Compard kit sold at Freestylephoto.com (currently out of stock, prob because it's pretty popular). There's a huge thread on APUG about it. I've used that kit with a jobo and it works pretty well for me, and I didn't have any b&w developing experience. So this should be easy for you. Also, the Rollei kit has a separate bleach and fixer instead of a combined "blix" like the kit on ebay does; the separate chemicals are supposed to give better results (color, sharpness).

The Tetenal kits are also popular, you can get those at B&H. IIRC those have the "blix" too, though.

Good luck!
 
thanks for the fast response.

BH shows the tetenal kit discontinued, and for some reason the rollei kit seems to be out of stock for a while now 🙁 (i saw it a few weeks ago, could it also be discontinued??).
ive read mixed opinions about the Bleach+fix VS blix with good and bad reviews going either way, i guess its a matter of what i can actually get that is in stock...

open to any other suggestions.
 
freestyle has the unicolor kit, and it looks like it's actually in stock. yeah, the rollei has been out for a while, but supposed to be back in stock next month. i hope that's true!
 
I decided to try my hand with C-41 a few weeks back and picked up the Unicolor C-41 kit from Freestyle. Easy to mix up and fairly easy to process. You do have to hold the developer temperature at 102 degrees F for 3 - 4 minutes which I do with a water bath. You also have to add to the developer time the more rolls you process. If not, your negatives will be a bit flat after the third or fourth roll (120). Overall, I'm satisfied with my results.

Jim B.
 
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