Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ?

2001-07-03 Thread Michel Adam
List wisdom needed: Over the week-end, at an outdoor concert, I mistakenly shot two rolls at ISO/ASA 100. One was a Kodak TMY 400 (bw), the other was a Konica Centuria 800 (C-41 process). Since I am sending this to a pro-lab, can I expect to get back something usable? Any suggestions as to

Re: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ?

2001-07-03 Thread Bill D. Casselberry
Michel Adam wrote: Over the week-end, at an outdoor concert, I mistakenly shot two rolls at ISO/ASA 100. One was a Kodak TMY 400 (bw), the other was a Konica Centuria 800 (C-41 process). Since I am sending this to a pro-lab, can I expect to get back something usable? Any

Re: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ?

2001-07-03 Thread William Robb
- Original Message - From: Michel Adam [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Pentax-Discuss@Pdml. Net [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: July 3, 2001 9:57 AM Subject: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ? List wisdom needed: Over the week-end, at an outdoor concert, I mistakenly shot two rolls at ISO/ASA

Re: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ?

2001-07-03 Thread Dave Evans
just tell them that you shot both at 100. - This message is from the Pentax-Discuss Mail List. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.pdml.net and follow the directions. Don't forget to visit the Pentax Users' Gallery at http://pug.komkon.org .

Re: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ?

2001-07-03 Thread Juan J. Buhler
On Tue, 3 Jul 2001, Michel Adam wrote: Over the week-end, at an outdoor concert, I mistakenly shot two rolls at ISO/ASA 100. One was a Kodak TMY 400 (bw), the other was a Konica Centuria 800 (C-41 process). Since I am sending this to a pro-lab, can I expect to get back something

Re: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ?

2001-07-03 Thread William Robb
Subject: Re: Salvaging unprocessed overexposed negs ? On Tue, 3 Jul 2001, Michel Adam wrote: Over the week-end, at an outdoor concert, I mistakenly shot two rolls at ISO/ASA 100. One was a Kodak TMY 400 (bw), the other was a Konica Centuria 800 (C-41 process). Since I am