Or make you're own b/w prints or pay someone to do it for you. So for an actual comparison you'd have to refer to slides and project them. Color prints are pretty much out of the question these days. The results are pretty bad so that I stopped making photographs for several years since I do not have my own darkroom and paying a specialty lab to make an actual traditional print is expensive and quite a bit of hassle. One of the reasons I finally caved in and bought a digital camera is that "modern" film processing is done by developing in chemistry, scanning the film with some mass scanning device at low resolution and then printing it with the same ink jet technology that unfortunately is now used for everything. ![]() ![]() Just out of curiosity: how did you compare this and how was the Kodak film printed? If you send it in and received "prints" from a lab then the result doesn't surprise me.
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