At 01:36 3/15/02, Jim Brockaw wrote:
The place in Colorado does, but it would be ~$28 to process the roll, and
they do a batch about every 6 months. You don't get slides back, rather B&W
prints from the film developed as a negative... apparently the color dyes
are no longer made.
I don't have that much curiosity about what (if anything) would be on the
roll.
--
Yes, applies to K-11, K-12 processing for Kodachrome. Found this out when
investigating what could be done with a roll of K-12 a while back.
Fortunately the Ektachromes can be processed as color transparency. I
don't know if they mount them or not. The web site would have details.
Kodachrome is essentially a three-layer B/W film with each layer responsive
to a portion of the spectrum. Unless the dye linkers and then the dyes are
added during the process, it remains B/W. If, in addition, it's not
"reversed" it's similar to a chromogenic B/W negative.
IIRC, if current K-14 Kodachrome is cross-processed E-6, it comes out B/W
transparency. How it looks as a "chromogenic" B/W tranny may be a
different matter entirely; I don't know.
-- John
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