Mark, 

I've used the Tetenal C-41 Press Kit to do C-41 at home. It's fast and 
reasonably easy, pretty stable too. The C-41 Press Kit chemistry was designed 
for journalists on the go so it's not as fussy as some C-41 processing kits 
are. B&H has it ...

http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/search?Ntt=Tetenal+C41+Press&N=0&InitialSearch=yes&sts=ma&Top+Nav-Search=

The only problem is that they generally don't ship it (stupid, it is dry powder 
chemistry and not likely to cause any problems), it requires in-store pick up. 
I bought six kits recently, had a friend pick them up and ship them to me. No 
problems at all. 

G

> On Apr 12, 2016, at 2:12 PM, Mark C <pdml-m...@charter.net> wrote:
> 
> Thanks, Darren - that's interesting. I never considered developing C41 at 
> home, mostly because it is reputed to be very sensitive to any temperature 
> variation. I'll take a look into the process. I'm familiar with B&W 
> processing in both 35mm and 120 - probably have done about 75 rolls thus far 
> in 2016. My main concern off the cuff would be regarding how long the C41 
> chemistry would keep once mixed, since I my use of color film is infrequent 
> and erratic.

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