Is there a chance that Flic Film would ever sell ECN-2 pre-bath as a stand-alone product? I would love to be able to roll, shoot and process my own cinema film using a C-41 kit, however removing the remjet has always been daunting.
@@davemarshall9302 Admittedly no. I do enjoy the flexibility of shooting C41 and ECN-2, can I feel like a ECN-2 pre-bath might open that door for me with minimal barrier to entry (especially since the majority of my current colour work would be C41, with the occasional ECN-2 roll). I have also been told that ECN-2 chemicals do tend to expire more quickly (based purely on what I've read), which is something I'd like to avoid as a more budget-oriented shooter.
Removing remjet is actually really easy. tablespoon of baking soda in your prebath and shake it to hell for a minute. then wash it out. Then after you're finished developing, before you hang it to dry, just gently rub the film with your thumb in the stabiliser (or whatever your final rinse is). Done. It's that easy.
Hi guys, what happened to the first instance of this video (Yesterday)?
We weren't happy with the results, Dalton was feeling a bit off so we took the same questions and shot it again.
Is there a chance that Flic Film would ever sell ECN-2 pre-bath as a stand-alone product? I would love to be able to roll, shoot and process my own cinema film using a C-41 kit, however removing the remjet has always been daunting.
Have you tried an ECN-2 kit? No color shifts, sharper, better to work with in Lightroom.
@@davemarshall9302 Admittedly no. I do enjoy the flexibility of shooting C41 and ECN-2, can I feel like a ECN-2 pre-bath might open that door for me with minimal barrier to entry (especially since the majority of my current colour work would be C41, with the occasional ECN-2 roll). I have also been told that ECN-2 chemicals do tend to expire more quickly (based purely on what I've read), which is something I'd like to avoid as a more budget-oriented shooter.
@@TheStralman Points taken, we will take a look at it.
Removing remjet is actually really easy. tablespoon of baking soda in your prebath and shake it to hell for a minute. then wash it out. Then after you're finished developing, before you hang it to dry, just gently rub the film with your thumb in the stabiliser (or whatever your final rinse is). Done. It's that easy.
Do you accept the return of your plastic cassettes to be re-used?
Hi James, thanks for the question. No we don't, logistically it would be difficult and realistically the fuel cost to transport would not be viable.
Reflx Lab Auto Bulk Film Loader ?