That might work for the Kodacolor II, since it's C-41, although I'm not sure
how thrilled the guys at my neighborhood shop will be to see a roll of 120 film
so old it may be brittle and/or stuck to the paper backing.
As for the Seattle Film Works stuff, I understand that film, being movie stock
ends and pieces, requires special processing. And surely this outfit has gone
down the drain by now! I tried their stuff way back in the '70s and was
totally underwhelmed. The Rocky Mountain folks will process a roll at a flat
$29.85, with a six- to eight-month turnaround, but with no option for develop
only at a reduced price.
Probably doesn't matter, though. Now I can't find it. Could it be that I have
actually discarded something? Maybe there's hope for me getting out from under
all this clutter yet! If I do come across it, I may try Piers' suggestion and
just soup it in some D-76 and see -- Anyone? Anyone? -- what develops.
Walt
--
"Anything more than 500 yards from
the car just isn't photogenic." --
Edward Weston
-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: ClassicVW@xxxxxxx
>
> Just get them developed, not printed and see if anything is there.
> My Fuji regional outlet store charges about $6 for developing AND printing
> 4x6 color negs.
>
> George S.
>
> hiwayman@xxxxxxx writes:
> Although I'm mildly curious about what's on them, I'm not curious enough to
> spend $28.85 per roll to get them processed. Now, if the film had been black
> and white, of course, I could give it a go myself. But, then, if a frog had
> wings...
>
> Walt
>
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