Hunter_Compton
Member
Presumably the grain is finer than normal negative processed Phoenix as it is a reversal process?
Presumably the grain is finer than normal negative processed Phoenix as it is a reversal process?
@chromemax and @loccdor - fantastic results! Thank you for sharing.
What was the reason for using ferricyanide bleach and neutral fixer instead of the bleach/fix from the Bellini kit?
@chromemax - You probably meant citrazinic acid which is used in the E6 color developer. Can you still obtain it at a reasonable price? Do you know if it works with C-41 couplers the same way as with the E6 process?
Unfortunately, the brightness range is pretty extreme.
For citrazinic acid,you can find some Food Grade Citric Acid Powder in Walmart for drink and cooking,sometimes they are sold as Detergent.
It's a very steep film. Not sure there's much you can do about it. Although it appears that in this reversal process, both the fogging exposure and the color development don't necessarily go to completion. You could try to manipulate contrast by varying the initial exposure, first development, fogging exposure and color development. Yes, that's 4 parameters to tune to each other. But it does give you something to play with.
Bit of a sidetrack here: @chromemax what camera/date back were you using for your initial shots? I notice the date back is able to record current dates. That's a rarity these days.
@chromemax and @loccdor - fantastic results! Thank you for sharing.
What was the reason for using ferricyanide bleach and neutral fixer instead of the bleach/fix from the Bellini kit?
@chromemax - You probably meant citrazinic acid which is used in the E6 color developer. Can you still obtain it at a reasonable price? Do you know if it works with C-41 couplers the same way as with the E6 process?
great, looks promising! I think the physical inversion is not so critical, i put the reel in a glass filled with water and proceed as you did.
The most critical step is first development and color developer.
Bleach and fix might be longer without harm and as i have learned from b/W inversion: best with vivid agitation.
I cant wait to try it too, thanks chromemax!
In Australia the full Bellini C-41 kit (A$90) is cheaper than buying the color developer (A$75), chemistry for the bleach and the fixer separately. The difference between the C-41 and E-6 (A$104) kits is just A$14.Hi Romanko, I used ferry bleach and neutral fixer because my goal was a low cost inversion process for photographers that just want to try shoot slide film but are scared by high cost.
I will order it and post my results of reversal processing in a separate thread. Does anyone have a guess at the ISO I would get if I processed it identically to how the Phoenix was done here? I'm going to bracket but I'd like to at least get an idea.I am very interested to see the results of "C-41 reversal processing" of Kodak Aerocolor - a far more superior film than Phoenix. Has anyone tried this?
Does anyone have a guess at the ISO I would get if I processed it identically to how the Phoenix was done here? I'm going to bracket but I'd like to at least get an idea.
It is only a guess. Aerocolor is basically the same speed (~ISO 100) as Phoenix but it is much more forgiving when overexposed. If you shoot it like Phoenix erring on the side of overexposure you should be fine, theoretically. Bracketing is always a good idea.
Wonder how much different the colors will be for me, since I'll be using an ECN-2 color dev instead of C-41.
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