35mm Format Film:Film Lab$ to Develop Color 35mm + scans*$ for Return Shipping of Negatives*The Darkroom$12~$5.95Richard Photo Lab$15~$6.85Dwayne's Photo$9flat $5 + $.50 per add. rollBlue Moon Camera & Machine$22.25~$9
Is it worth developing film at home? It's cheaper to develop film at home if you're going to shoot more than 20 rolls per year. If you like having control over the process, and are willing to spend the time developing and scanning, you will save a lot of money by doing it yourself.
Developing Costs Don't worry too much about cost. The stores and services listed here charge between $5 and $11 to process one roll of 35mm film. Other film formats like 120 and 220 may cost a bit more, while the fees for push and pull processing are usually charged as an extra percentage of your developing costs.
Process & Scan Pricing:TypeB&W ScansECN-235mmNormal – $18 Large – $21 X-Large – $24Normal – $16 Large – $21 X-Large – $26120Normal – $15 Large – $18 X-Large – $21Normal – $16 Large – $21 X-Large – $26220Normal – $25 Large – $29 X-Large – $34-4 x 5Normal – $17 Large – $21-
Whether it's new or old roll film, standard 35mm film or something strange (see our film form index), The Darkroom can professionally develop it for you.
Yes. Old film doesn't go bad all at once – colors shift, contrast fades away, and fog builds up. Old film (~10+ years past the process date) will have faded, skewing towards magenta. In many cases, this is preferred and authentic to the time.
If something is supposed to happen by a certain day, it means it is supposed to happen not later than that, so it includes the day as well.
By a date means before but including that date. If you do not want to include that date, then use before instead. So "By Feb.