Photos NOT OK to edit. May 17, 2014. #2. $10 a roll for dev/cd is the norm. Here at my lab in St. Louis we charge $9.95 dev/cd, if film is blank or un-scannable, the development is no charge.
Unless it's been very carefully stored you're not going to get great images out of 20 year expired film regardless of whether you push it a stop or not. If you're shooting film that old I'm guessing the "lo-fi" effects of the likely degradation are part of the appeal, in which case I'd develop as normal.
To shoot expired film, any expired film, over-expose the film by one stop. Just one. A single stop, regardless of when the film expired. Set the exposure compensation dial to +1, or do it manually. After that, just meter normally, shoot normally, develop normally, and expect the worst. This whole dance has to happen in the dark as well, as you slip the film in and out of the tank and past filtered lights. The process is unique and only used with Kodachrome. Objectively, it was totally unlike any other film produced and I truly believe that the complexity of this process played a massive part in the eventual demise of the film.
5. PerceptionShift • 4 yr. ago. It will need more exposure time, have lower contrast, and produce bigger grain. If it's 400 speed b&w, shoot it at 200 and air on the side of underexposing for it. I've yet to overexpose expired film though, even after dozens of rolls. Worth adding that I shot a 10y.o. arista 125 roll at box speed and it came

Use Your Smartphone. Ironically, the first place to begin your analog journey is on your smartphone. Create a film photography folder on your phone. In it you’ll want to keep a basic 35mm

WpFta.
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  • how to develop expired film