chemical glitch
Taken with an Olympus XA4 camera using 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.
When I first processed the film I thought it was blank, but the partially removed remjet looked interesting, so I scanned the negatives before wiping off the dried remjet and re-scanning, which did manage to reveal some very faint images, this is probably because the Tetenal C41 chemistry is exhausted, as I achieved denser negatives from a previous roll of the same film.
chemical glitch
Taken with an Olympus XA4 camera using 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.
When I first processed the film I thought it was blank, but the partially removed remjet looked interesting, so I scanned the negatives before wiping off the dried remjet and re-scanning, which did manage to reveal some very faint images, this is probably because the Tetenal C41 chemistry is exhausted, as I achieved denser negatives from a previous roll of the same film.