Tried cleaning up a Rollei iso 640 frame - was trying to get to about the same grain as some iso 400 films I've shot. Kinda threw the kitchen sink at it, because this is the delight mac-n-cheese causes little people to experience.
I'm done with this film in 120 as it's just too curly; the 35mm version dries nice and flat no problem and I will continue to shoot it in 35mm. I developed this roll, as an an experiment, in Flic Film's Black, White, and Green for 13 minutes...which was just a guess and it was too long. Negatives were really dense and overdeveloped; this was the only salvageable image from the roll.
I got scans of a roll of Ektar 100 back from the lab. All shot with M6 classic. I’ve got a bunch of rolls of Ektar 100 that I bought for not much money on Amazon a while back, but am itching to shoot Ilford (I think HP5) when we get back to Key West next week.
In the continued quest for under the radar film P&S, I came across the Konica Z-Up 70 VP in like new condition with case, box, manual for less than $30. It even came with two CR123 batteries.
I just quickly ran through a roll of Portra 400 (go big or go home) and here are some results. I did run these through Topaz Photo AI for sharpening but why not!