Film development hub · Berlin

WHICH
PROCESS?

Five processes. One correct answer inside the film you shot. Use this guide to choose C‑41, ECN‑2, black & white, E‑6 or Scala before your roll reaches the chemistry.

Start with the film

Do not choose by colour alone.

The correct development process is determined by the film stock—not by the camera, the cassette colour or whether you want colour or black-and-white scans.

Look at the box, cassette, backing paper or manufacturer instructions. The process is often printed beside the film name. If the roll was bulk-loaded, experimental, expired or relabelled, follow the seller’s instructions or ask before processing it.

Choosing the wrong chemistry can permanently alter or damage the film. If you are uncertain, send us a clear photograph of the cassette and packaging through our contact page.

CHECK 01

Film name

Kodak Gold, Portra, Vision3, Ilford HP5, Ektachrome and Scala-type films do not all use the same chemistry.

CHECK 02

Process marking

Look specifically for C‑41, ECN‑2, black-and-white negative, E‑6 or B&W reversal instructions.

CHECK 03

Special notes

Remjet, push/pull, cross-processing, expired stock and unusual formats should be declared before development.

The quick answer

What should the developed film look like?

C‑41
C‑41GOLD 200
Example film

Colour negative film

The developed strip has orange or amber masking and reversed colours.

Most consumer colour films, including many Kodak, Fujifilm and Lomography negative stocks.

Choose C‑41 ↓
ECN‑2
ECN‑2ETERNA 160T
Example film

Cinema colour negative

Motion-picture stocks commonly designed for ECN‑2, often with remjet.

Kodak Vision3, Fujifilm Eterna and other cinema stocks when their instructions specify ECN‑2.

Choose ECN‑2 ↓
B&W
B&WHARDLINE 400
Example film

Black-and-white negative

Light and dark values appear reversed on a monochrome negative.

Most traditional black-and-white films such as HP5, Tri‑X, Fomapan and similar stocks.

Choose B&W ↓
E‑6
E‑6 SLIDECOLOUR POSITIVE
Example film

Colour positive / slide

The developed film shows the actual colours directly, without a negative inversion.

Colour reversal films such as Ektachrome, Provia, Velvia and other films marked E‑6.

Choose E‑6 ↓
SCALA
B&W REVERSALSCALA 50
Example film

Black-and-white positive

The monochrome image appears directly as a positive transparency.

Films intended or confirmed for black-and-white reversal processing—not every B&W stock automatically.

Choose Scala ↓
Side by side

Five processes, compared simply.

Process Film type Developed result Typical clue Important warning
C‑41 Colour negative Colour negative, commonly with orange mask C‑41 printed on box or cassette Do not assume every colour film is C‑41.
ECN‑2 Cinema colour negative Low-contrast colour negative intended for cinema workflow ECN‑2, Vision3, Eterna or remjet information Declare remjet; some respools have different instructions.
B&W Black-and-white negative Monochrome negative B&W film name and negative-process instructions Developer choice and push/pull affect the result.
E‑6 Colour reversal Direct colour positive / slide E‑6 or colour reversal marked on packaging Exposure errors are less forgiving than negative film.
Scala Black-and-white reversal Direct monochrome positive Scala or confirmed B&W reversal compatibility Not every conventional B&W film should be ordered as Scala.
Explore each process

Choose the chemistry that belongs to the film.

Black and white film development at Berlin Photo Studio
Monochrome negative

Black & white

Traditional negative processing for monochrome films. Tell us if the roll was exposed at a different ISO and needs push or pull treatment.

Scala black and white reversal film development at Berlin Photo Studio
Monochrome positive

Scala

Specialised black-and-white reversal processing that produces a direct positive. Confirm compatibility when the film is not explicitly marked for reversal.

Avoid the expensive mistake

The label wins over the guess.

Film stocks can be respooled, remjet-removed, cross-processable or sold under another name. The safest answer is always the process specified for that exact product.

“It is colour, so it must be C‑41.”

Not necessarily. Cinema negative may require ECN‑2, while colour slide film normally requires E‑6.

“It is Kodak, so the process is obvious.”

A manufacturer can produce C‑41, ECN‑2, E‑6 and B&W films. Read the stock name and process.

“All cinema film has remjet.”

Some photographic respools are sold with remjet removed or with specific C‑41 compatibility. Follow that product’s instructions.

“Any B&W film can become a slide.”

Black-and-white reversal requires appropriate film and processing. Ask before choosing Scala for an ordinary B&W roll.

After chemistry

Development, scanning or both?

Only develop when you want the processed negatives or positives and plan to scan or print them elsewhere.

Develop + JPEG scan is the practical option for viewing, sharing and everyday printing. Develop + TIFF scan is better suited to substantial editing, reproduction or archive-master files.

If your film is already developed, use our film scanning guide instead of ordering development again.

OPTION 01

Only develop

You receive the processed physical film without new digital files.

OPTION 02

Develop + JPEG

A lighter, convenient digital delivery for normal use.

OPTION 03

Develop + TIFF

A larger master file for editing, publishing and archival workflows.

Film development FAQ

Still unsure which process?

Where can I find the development process?

Check the film box, cassette, backing paper and manufacturer or seller description. Look specifically for C‑41, ECN‑2, E‑6, black-and-white negative or black-and-white reversal information.

Can you identify an unknown film for me?

Often we can help, but identification is not always guaranteed—especially with relabelled, bulk-loaded or very old film. Send a clear photograph of every visible label before ordering.

Can ECN‑2 film be developed in C‑41?

Some photographers intentionally cross-process certain cinema stocks, and some respools are sold after remjet removal with C‑41 guidance. That does not make the processes identical. Follow the instructions for your exact roll and declare what is inside.

What is the difference between E‑6 and Scala?

Both are reversal processes that produce a direct positive. E‑6 is for compatible colour slide film; Scala-style processing is for compatible black-and-white reversal film.

What if I pushed or pulled the film?

Tell us the exposure ISO and requested push or pull adjustment when ordering. Do not rely only on a handwritten cassette note that could be missed.

Can I mail film to Berlin Photo Studio?

Yes. Read our mail-in film development guide before packaging the rolls, and clearly separate films requiring different processes.

The chemistry should never be a surprise

Identify the film, choose the process and send it to the Berlin Photo Studio lab.

When film is experimental, relabelled, expired or historically important, contact us before ordering. A short question is safer than the wrong chemistry.

Related knowledge

Development processes

How to identify C-41 film →How to identify ECN-2 cinema film →How to identify black-and-white film →How to identify E-6 slide film →What is remjet? →Can ECN-2 film be developed in C-41? →Can C-41 film be developed in ECN-2? →Negative film vs slide film →What happens during film development? →Why film development cannot be repeated →