The effect is more accurately described as "bromide drag". As the developer exhausts, the by-products of run down the surface of the film, thereby impeding development in those areas. The areas with the light streaks on the print, suffer from less development. The lighter parts of the print (darker on the negative) are the areas that got more development. What you're seeing there are the effects of not agitating enough. It's not enough! The whole business about surge marks from over agitating is bogus. I have been told by a friend that its bromide drag, from too much agitation, but i dont think 10 secs every I some frames they are more pronounced, in other a lot less, some times they vanish in mid frame, others they go through all over. ![]() However the stripes are seen and especially if you increase the contrast they are more than visible and what troubles me is that they are related to the perforated area of the film, its like hole, stripe, hole, stripe. When scanned in b.w you dont see it at all. Also they had in certain parts a brownish colour, but inconsinstet. Now as you can see there are vertical light stripes across the negatives. Washed with cold water and fixed with Ilford fixer at room temperature Since the time would be 11 mins for 20C and I used dilution H I developed for 11x2=22 mins plus 1. Kodak GOLD 200 makes comeback in 120 formatĬineStill reveals 400Dynamic film in 35mm and 120 formatsįuguFilm 400 – first all-new slide film since 2005įollow AP on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.I developed two rolls of 35mm HP5 pushed at 1600 iso. ORWO reveals Wolfen NC500: first new colour film for decades It also makes a variety of ‘speciality film’, such as the pre-exposed Hanalogital VEINS 35mm colour film (which offers gradient red stripes in the frame) and the BKIFI B&W $$$ film (which has a dollar pattern spread on the frame).ĭubblefilm also has the SHOW reusable 35mm camera with flash, which sells from for £49 with a neck strap and custom Nähe case. ![]() The company now has a range of 35mm format films including the DAILY colour 35mm film, APOLLO 200 35mm film, JELLY 200, SOLAR 200 and PACIFIC 200. If you need lab recommendations for film processing just go to Dubblefilm – find a lab!ĭubblefilm Cinema 800 speed colour print film comes in single rolls, two-packs or five-packs About Dubblefilmĭubblefilm launched with two special effects films as a collaboration with the mobile app Dubble in 2017. ![]() Pricing & availabilityĭubblefilm Cinema 800 is available now in 36-exposure rolls, which are priced at £14.43 a roll, £30.01 for a two-pack or £72.87 for a five-pack.ĭubble products sell in over 200 stores around the world – to find out more go to the Dubblefilm website. The Dubblefilm Cinema 800 announcement is just the latest in series of 2022 announcements about new films, including Kodak GOLD 200’s comeback in 120 format, the launch of CineStill 400Dynamic film and the news of Fugufilm 400: the first all-new slide film since 2005. Wolfen NC500 is an emulsion also that is based on Agfa’s XTY320 colour cinema film, that was used in shooting movies such as Out of Africa, Last of the Mohicans and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. News of the new Dubblefilm Cinema 800 film comes less than two weeks since ORWO revealed Wolfen NC500. The packaging dubs Dubblefilm Cinema as ‘Movie film ready to shoot your masterpiece’ Spate of film launches The company has added that if photographers are using an electric camera with a DX reader (which automatically determines the film speed), they’ll need to manually apply the supplied DX code sticker before loading the film into their 35mm cameras. ![]() In order to convert the film Dubblefilm is manually spooling it, which means photographers should expect light leaks on the first couple of frames. The Remjet layer isn’t compatible with regular film developers, so it has had to be removed to allow the Cinema 800 film to be processed in C-41 chemicals.Ī Remjet layer did appear on Kodachrome film, which meant it had to be developed via the unique K-14 process. It has four purposes: anti-halation, anti-static (static can cause film to fog), lubrication and scratch protection. The aforementioned Remjet layer is a cinematic film’s removable jet black layer, which is the coating of carbon black particles in a water-soluble binder on the bottom of the film. The name of the new film clearly comes from the fact that Dubblefilm has repurposed motion picture film for the 35mm format. A test shot taken on Dubblefilm Cinema 800 print film RemJet layer & DX coding
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