Carlos, If you could go into production with one or two 220 B&W emulsions, I bet you'd find a ready market. Robert On Jul 14, 2012, at 3:54 PM, Marc James Small wrote: > At 04:27 PM 7/14/2012, CarlosMFreaza wrote: > >2012/7/14 David Sadowski <dsadowski@xxxxxxxxx>: > >> With a scanner, does t really matter, since you can scan your color > >> neg from your 220 roll, and create a balck-and-white image in a photo > >> editor, adjusting contrast, etc.? > > > >David: > > You could ask the same about 120 B&W film, but color film is > >for color, B&W film is for B&W, if you like and you appreciate > >traditional photography things work this way and you also have the > >enlarger and the B&W papers, BTW, I can develop B&W at home, I can't > >develop color at home. > > > Carlos > > Color emulsions, even E6, are rather easy to develop at home. If you can do > black and white, you can do color. It is not that hard, though the chemistry > can be more volatile than B&W stuff. > > Marc > > > msmall@xxxxxxxxxxxx > Cha robh bàs fir gun ghràs fir! > > --- > Rollei List > > - Post to rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > > - Subscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'subscribe' > in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org > > - Unsubscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with > 'unsubscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org > > - Online, searchable archives are available at > //www.freelists.org/archives/rollei_list > --- Rollei List - Post to rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx - Subscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'subscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org - Unsubscribe at rollei_list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'unsubscribe' in the subject field OR by logging into www.freelists.org - Online, searchable archives are available at //www.freelists.org/archives/rollei_list