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Cn2 Color Negative ECN-2 Developer, Low-Contrast Motion Picture Color Negatives For ECP & Scanning Discount

Original price was: $12.99.Current price is: $6.50.
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15 - 22 Mar, 2025
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Description

After years of research & development, CineStill has now formulated the only safe and consistent way to process stills with the same characteristics Hollywood expects, from the comfort of your home.

Process or Bleach-Bypass ANY color negative film with Cn2 Low-Contrast Developer and our  F96 Rapid Fixer, Not Included.

*Not intend for RA-4 chromogenic printing!

Our Cn2 “COLOR NEGATIVE” developer is combined with the prebath accelerant, to produce proper ECN-2 density, for CineStill negatives that match the characteristic curves for true motion picture processing. Reusable solution develops 16+ rolls color film and can be reused alongside the Bf2 Blix bath following the Cs2 instructions, or F96 Rapid Fixer for Bleach-Bypass color process. Bleach-bypassed color film requires Rapid Fixer (ammonium thio) to fully clear the color dyes.

The Bleach-bypass color process, also known as skip bleach or silver retention, is a process of skipping the step of bleaching during processing of color films. By doing this, silver is retained in the emulsion along with color dyes. The result is a black and white image over a color image. The images usually have reduced saturation along with increased contrast and graininess. And if you ever want to remove the effect you can simply process it in the Bf2 bath included in our Cn2 ECN 2-Bath Kits.

Motion Picture  Bleach-bypass was first used in cinematography by Japanese filmmaker Hiroshi Inagaki in film Rickshaw Man (1957). Kazuo Miyagawa, as Daiei Film s cameraman, invented bleach-bypass for Inagaki s film, inspired by the color rendition in the original release of Moby-Dick (1956), printed using dye-transfer Technicolor, and was achieved through the use of an additional black and white overlay. Actually, this is a throwback to pre-1944 Technicolor, which incorporated a silver-containing blank receiver . Despite this early foray into the technique, it remained overlooked for the most part until its use by Roger Deakins for 1984 (1984). The effect has subsequently become a regular development tool in labwork, and has remained in widespread use. Practitioners include cinematographers Rodrigo Prieto, Remi Adefarasin, Darius Khondji, Dariusz Wolski, Walter Carvalho, Oliver Stapleton, Newton Thomas Sigel, Park Gok-ji, Shane Hurlbut, Steven Soderbergh (as Peter Andrews ), Tom Stern, Vittorio Storaro, and Janusz Kamiński (notably on Steven Spielberg s Saving Private Ryan and Minority Report.

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