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It is Kodak Disc, I think it is 110 .

2006-12-06 09:17:25 · 6 answers · asked by e_pauley 1 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

6 answers

at any drug stores
a regular photographer might....

2006-12-06 09:20:04 · answer #1 · answered by StarShine G 7 · 0 0

Ahh liberated film?

Rocky Mountain in Denver does this type of thing and charge.. or did in the past.. an arm and a leg to develop really old film.
www.rockymountainfilm.com/disc.htm

If you contact them and send the disc to them, they will quote a high price. If you send it to them, INSIST that they make prints of the images regardless of whether or not they think it's printable.

I make art with found film sometimes and love the odd images that may look like nothing to someone else.

The down side is that the film may be too old to have retained images, but the thrill of the chase and seeing what amounts to history stored on this old film can be lots of fun.

good luck

2006-12-06 17:23:08 · answer #2 · answered by vertically challenged 3 · 0 1

I wouldn't take it to a one hour place, take it to a click camera store or mail it off to a lab where they will take more attention and care of it.

One hour labs suck. For anything.

2006-12-06 22:31:12 · answer #3 · answered by angrdrgz3 3 · 0 0

any one-hour photo shop should work fine.
just don't have any expectations, if it has been exposed to extreme heat or cold chances diminish that it will develop.

2006-12-06 17:39:27 · answer #4 · answered by jj raider 4 · 0 0

Try this:

http://www.rockymountainfilm.com/

2006-12-06 17:21:24 · answer #5 · answered by Richard E 4 · 0 0

If you get it developed and its pornography you will have lots of explaining to do.

2006-12-06 17:43:26 · answer #6 · answered by KingFunky 2 · 0 0

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