Wednesday, June 04, 2014

Question?

I came across a box of several hundred negatives.
How do you get them developed these days?

6 comments:

Unknown said...

You might be able to scan them directly into the computer. I have a machine that I bought that does this. - from Roswell, GA

Ole Whitey said...

B&W snapshots died overnight like so many things we were used to.

Here in Music City there are only two places that develop them- Wolf Camera sends them to Atlanta and the other joint is for up-scale folks and out of my reach.

Have you tried to buy any clothes made in America lately? The world has changed too fast for me.

Paul Gutheil said...

My local Moto Photo does all sizes of negs and makes very good prints, but if you've got 100's it would probably be very expen$ive, even if they gave you a package deal.

Good luck, I'm sure you've go all us loyal bloggers bustin with curiosity.

Paul Gutheil said...

PS Should have said that Al has a good point. Your best bet would be to check with the Shazz master 1st.

Harry Kingston said...

As a photographer for many years I did them in my own darkroom and any size.
But times change and the lab I use now and you will not believe it but Dewaynes, in Parsons. Kansas.
Just to show you how good they are they were the last lab in the WORLD that processed Kodachrome and had Kodak's Blessing.
They do black and white and color all sizes and do the best I have ever seen.
They just mad me some color prints of old and I mean old Kodachrome slides that with the thin layers of Kodachrome is very hard to do and they are set up for it.
I am a customer of there's and they took me in to see the Kodachrome processing machine the only one in the world and I was like a kid at his first circus.
They come highly recommended.
Good prices to.
Harry in Texas

Bob Cline said...

I agree with Al. I scan all sizes of negatives. It's almost impossible to even get a true black and white photo printed anymore. Everything goes through a color processor. I'm sure you have folks near you that could do it, but if not, I'll be glad to do them for you.
All my best,
Bob