| Re: how can i print from b&w negatives? Steve
There was no showing off. It was a simple question since the OP was not clear in his
original post
>And as long as we're showing off, there was E4 before E6 and E3 before
>E4; C22 preceded C41.
E3&E4 goes back a long way and I doubt that anyone that did not store those slides
properly in humid and light resistant containers are now useless. C22 about the same
story
>What E6 has to do with b/w slides is beyond me.
We pushed processed BW slides with the same E6 chems as we did with color. We only
pushed the process 1-1 1/2 stops in the first immersion. It came out excellent
--
Peter
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"Steve Rindsberg" <abuse@localhost.com> wrote in message
news:VA.00004f9f.29ca3af2@localhost.com...
> In article <Or#2yp9#JHA.4376@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl>, James Silverton
> wrote:
>> Peter wrote on Thu, 2 Jul 2009 19:41:05 -0400:
>>
>> > Are you talking about E6 or C41. E6 being slides either color
>> > or B&W and C41 being a negative
>>
>> For unenlightened people like me, please translate notation like "E6".
>
> Kodak calls the chemical process for developing Ektachrome slide film
> E6.
>
> C41 is what they call the process for developing color negative film.
>
> And as long as we're showing off, there was E4 before E6 and E3 before
> E4; C22 preceded C41.
>
> What E6 has to do with b/w slides is beyond me.
>
> And now that you know, here's the quiz:
>
> Find even the merest bit of relevance to scanning slides and b/w or
> color negatives in all of that. You have five minutes.
>
> Start ..... now!
>
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