Interestingly enough, Dwaynes is also the only lab in the U.S. still processing Fujichrome.
I suppose once I shoot up the last of the Fuji out of the bottom of the fridge, and scan it into the computer, and finish all of Dad's old b&w 35mm stuff (if it lives that long), I can just retire the film scanner to collect dust and cobwebs till its officially a museum piece.
Genes Home wrote:
Interestingly enough, Dwaynes is also the only lab in the U.S. still processing Fujichrome.
I suppose once I shoot up the last of the Fuji out of the bottom of the fridge, and scan it into the computer, and finish all of Dad's old b&w 35mm stuff (if it lives that long), I can just retire the film scanner to collect dust and cobwebs till its officially a museum piece.
I know of atleast 2-3 local labs that still use Fuji printers, papers and processing.
Is there some mystical Fujichrome I'm unaware of? I've only ever seen it used as an umbrella for Fuji's chrome films, which are just plain ol' E-6 processing.