View allAll Photos Tagged ecn2
Nikon F3
Six Gates Films Orwell BW @400 iso
developed in Tmax dev 7''
epson v700
almost all of this picture were taken by Luca (Laszlo K.) while i was developing.
it has been a glorious day. We developed over 23 rolls of color negative cinema film in a vintage Morse G3 tank. We had some major fixing issue but we saved some good frames & had a good time.
Bottom line:
1)ECN2 is totally feasible for home processing
2) Morse G3 tank agitation could not be the best for these films.
3) we took a little step forward for DIY film photography
canon AE1P
canon fd 55mm f1.2
multi image filter
kodak 5212 100T expired
double exposure
home brew diy ECN2
v600 scan
minolta srt101
Vision ECN2 320T film
accidentaly redscaled
expired (04?)
tetenal c41
remjet preremoved before shooting
New day new film. Recently I got some long expired Fujifilm F-64D cine film, which is supposedly have very fine grain, good resolution and daylight balanced. The results shows it aged pretty well.
Technical info:
- Camera: Zeiss Contarex Bullseye
- Lens: Zeiss Sonnar 85mm f2
- Film: Fujifilm F-64D cine film (expired, shot at ISO 25)
- Development: ECN2 home processing
- Scanning: Nikon Coolscan V with Nikon Scan
- PostPro: Adobe Lightroom
Leica M4-2 (Canada), Summarit 35 2.5 (Germany).
Fuji 250D (Japan), ECN-2 develiping kit (Russia).
Ilford 5x7 RC MG paper (England).
2016. Ontario (where M4-2 was made).
Kodak Vision 3 200T (Film for ECN2 process), developed for 3 minutes in RA4 (colour paper) chemistry. Test film, see this discussion.
Neighborhood. First use of Kodak 5277. Developed in ECN-2 One Shot developer.
Kodak 5277 Vision 320T shot with Nikon with N90s with Auto Vivitar 21mm Wide Angle lens in T4 mount with Nikon adapter converted to AI. (no filter) Developed in one shot ECN-2 developer from linuxphreak2005 www.flickr.com/photos/132303390@N02/
DEVELOPER
Water 250ml 70-100f
Sodium Sulfite .5 gram
Potassium Bromide .35 gram
Sodium Carbonate 6.4 grams
Sodium Bicarbonate .70 grams
CD3 1 gram
I doubled the recipe for my tank.
Prebath was Kodak PB-1
Prebath 2 (PB-2)
Water 27 to 38°C (80 to 100°F) 800 mL
Borax (Decahydrated) 20.0 g
Sodium Sulfate (Anhydrous) 100 g
Sodium Hydroxide 1.0 g
Water to make 1 L
pH at 25.0°C (77.0°F) 9.25 ± 0.10
Stop was Kodak SB-14 (modifed)
Stop (SB-14)
Water 21 to 38°C (70 to 100°F) 900 mL
Sulfuric Acid (7.0 N) 50 mL
Water to make 1 L pH at 25.0°C (77.0°F) 0.8 to 1.5
(Added 5g/L Sodium Sulfite for clearing)
Potassium Ferricyanide Bleach
Ilford Hypam fix.
Times (As listed by linuxphreak2005
Dev 3mins@106f
Stop Bath 1Min 100f
Wash 1min 100f
Bleach 6Min 100-106
Wash 1min 100
Fixer 5min 100-106
Scanned with Canon 9000F
Post processing in photoshop.
20201129 in Ogden, Utah USA
I developed this film using QWD ECN-2 chemistry. It's a long story about a gift of 4 Silbersalz rolls that should have included developing and scanning back in Stuttgart. Instead, the film took a round trip from New York to Frankfurt, getting stuck in German customs for months with indifferent support from Silbersalz. So upon their return to me, I developed and scanned them myself. QWD makes a great product for home development of Vision3.
Shut down water pump in the middle of the Great Salt Lake Desert near Park Valley. Fuji 400 in ECN2 developer
minolta srt101
Vision ECN2 320T film
accidentaly redscaled
expired (04?)
tetenal c41
remjet preremoved before shooting
Two consecutive frames taken with a Lomography LC-W camera on Kodak Vision ECN2 320T film from Six Gates Films of Milan.
This film stock was made for cinematography, and is balanced for Tungsten light and uses the ECN-2 process. The film has a sticky black "Remjet" coating which must be removed, and prevents the film being processed in a standard C41 lab. I used my exhausted Tetenal C41 kit so as not to risk spoiling a new batch.
The expected blue cast is due to the film being used in daylight without a correcting filter.
Película: De cine Desconocida
Cámara: Olympus 35 RC
IE: 200 ASA
Revelador: RA4
Temperatura: 37 ºC
Tiempo: 4 minutos
Rollo: 1-2
Todo el proceso se hizo con agua destilada
I developed this film using QWD ECN-2 chemistry. It's a long story about a gift of 4 Silbersalz rolls that should have included developing and scanning back in Stuttgart. Instead, the film took a round trip from New York to Frankfurt, getting stuck in German customs for months with indifferent support from Silbersalz. So upon their return to me, I developed and scanned them myself. QWD makes a great product for home development of Vision3.