The sepia is a consequence of printing onto color type paper, no way to get
rid of it that I know of. Have them process the roll and then print on
conventional B&W paper to get B&W. BTW, the last time I had my one hour lab
do a roll they gave it to me free, they were concerned they had screwed up
the film somehow! Nothing I said could get them to change their mind!
Jim Couch
ll.clark@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
> In <3B7AC5FA.3B43E18C@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, on 08/15/01 at 07:56 PM,
> Roger Wesson <roger@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> said:
>
> >I don't do my own d&p, so the fact that this film is cheap to develop
> >and comes back beautifully sepia-toned is great for me.
>
> Can the one-hour shop drop the sepia in favor of black and white if one
> requests it?
>
> ---------------------------------------------
> les clark / edgewater, nj / usa
> ---------------------------------------------
>
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--
Jim Couch
Tacoma, WA USA
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