[Frameworks] KOKDAK Ektachrome Super 8 G

2014-04-05 Thread Katherine Bauer
Can you use regular E-6 chemistry that I was using for other Ektachrome Super 8mm for Ektachrome Super 8mm G type? I just realized I have some roll that says it is G type - I read online that this is somehow a different type of film and that takes different type of development... is that true?

Re: [Frameworks] KOKDAK Ektachrome Super 8 G

2014-04-05 Thread Scott Dorsey
There were two different Type G films, the latter one is marked Process EM-6 and it can be processed in E-6 chemistry. This is a very strange film; the color layers are stacked up in a different order than with most other reversal films, and the color balance is sort of in-between daylight and

Re: [Frameworks] KOKDAK Ektachrome Super 8 G

2014-04-05 Thread Stefan Grabowski
, 5 Apr 2014 14:34:23 -0400 From: kittylitter...@gmail.com To: frameworks@jonasmekasfilms.com Subject: [Frameworks] KOKDAK Ektachrome Super 8 G Can you use regular E-6 chemistry that I was using for other Ektachrome Super 8mm for Ektachrome Super 8mm G type? I just realized I have some roll

Re: [Frameworks] KOKDAK Ektachrome Super 8 G

2014-04-05 Thread Fred Camper
I fell in love with Ektachrome Type G when I was shooting in super-8 in the late 1970s and 1980s. My understanding is that it was developed by Kodak for those consumers who could not remember, or understand how, to change the daylight/tungsten switch built into super-8 cameras that would put