Jbennett68
Well-known
Does anyone develop their own film but still send negatives out for scanning? Developing sounds fun but scanning sounds tedious.
More likely to do the opposite if colour. Mixing up fresh colour chemicals (C-41, ECN2 or E6) for one film is a pain and expensive. Better take it round the corner to a shop then scan it yourself. BW is different of course as a bucket of ID-11/D-76 lasts ages.Does anyone develop their own film but still send negatives out for scanning? Developing sounds fun but scanning sounds tedious.
ll be black and white but trying to figure out if it’s just a waste of time in the money saved off if I still send the negatives out for scanning. It doesn’t seem to be a popular option other than for people who have a backlog of old negatives or slides.More likely to do the opposite if colour. Mixing up fresh colour chemicals (C-41, ECN2 or E6) for one film is a pain and expensive. Better take it round the corner to a shop then scan it yourself. BW is different of course as a bucket of ID-11/D-76 lasts ages.
Of course this presupposes a shop round the corner! I'm lucky.
I think it depends where you find your fun and how much you trust other people to do what you could do. Also what scanning kit you have of course, and which format. There are a lot of variables.It wi
ll be black and white but trying to figure out if it’s just a waste of time in the money saved off if I still send the negatives out for scanning. It doesn’t seem to be a popular option other than for people who have a backlog of old negatives or slides.
Scanning is not tedious if you simply edit before you scan. And, editing the negs on a light table is easier than editing from a proof sheet since you will be working with a first generation (the neg) instead of second generation (contact sheet) The only people who have problems editing from a negative image are those who have convinced themselves that it cannot be done before they ever tried.
I learned this developing E-6 and mounting 35mm slides at home. Mounting multiple batches of 36 slides became tedious, so I learned to edit and only mount the 2-3-4 frames that were worthwhile.Scanning is not tedious if you simply edit before you scan.