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Diana cameras where can u develop the film?

The brand is lomogrophy

2 Answers

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  • kaiy2k
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    If you are shooting with a Diana F or F+, you are working with 120 film.

    120 film is a little more difficult to deal with, since there are fewer labs that can process it. Ask around at your local Walmart, Costco or other 1-hour labs. While they may not be able to process the on site, many of these labs will send the film out to be processed for you.

    The next option is to find a local pro-lab. These are labs that specifically cater to professional photographers and will be able to process your film on site. As you might imagine, it can be a little pricey.

    Another film processing option is to send out the film to be processed. Check out these processors, they both offer processing by mail:

    http://www.dwaynesphoto.com/

    http://www.swanphotolabs.com/swan08/index.php

    Then the best of all option, process the film yourself. BW film processing and even color processing are not too difficult to learn and also not very expensive to get into.

    For Diana tips

    http://www.dianacamera.com/

    I have lots of tips, tricks and photos taken with plastic cameras.

    For how-to videos for Holgas and Diana cameras, check out my youtube channel:

    http://www.youtube.com/kaituba

  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    That depends on which film you shoot. If color negative or slide film, you need a commercial lab. Search the Internet for a "custom photographic lab" near you. For extra fun, see if you can get the lab to cross-process your film -- process slide film in negative chemistry and vice-versa. You get interesting effects this way.

    B/W film is easy to develop yourself. You need two chemicals and a daylight-loading tank. But if you don't want to fool with that, custom labs will also do it for you.

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