Kodak Black & White 400 Speed 24 Exposure 35mm Film (3 Pack)

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Some need to know info......2010-02-01
It is possible to get very nice black and white photos with this film. What you have to know is, don't take it to your average 1 hr. processing lab (walmart, walgreens, cvs). You have to take it to a camera center. Most one hour places can run thousands of rolls of color film thru long before they get to yours and this is what causes the strange pink/purple/mauve/sepia color.
Still not black and white.2009-06-23
This is just another chance for consumer photo labs to throw mediocrity at you.
If you process b&w film yourself, it's fairly cheap and takes well under an hour, even if you develop three or four rolls at a time. It's not hard to set up somewhere where you can develop film, that's what blackbags are for.
And printing black and white on color paper? Doesn't sound like a good idea to begin with. Especially with the pinkish tint, you're never going to get "black and white" from that.
Great B&W film for those who don't have darkrooms2008-03-01
The Kodak 400 ISO B&W C-41 processable film is a great option for those who want to shoot in black & white but don't have reliable darkroom access to develop their own film. It has a high enough speed that makes it versatile for many lighting conditions, and afterwards, it can be processed anywhere. Image quality is just as crisp as Kodak's Tri-X film.

This film used to be sold in four-packs through Target, but has been discontinued there, and is now becoming slightly harder to find - stock up now before it goes the way of the Polaroid.
Could be a little lower in price.2008-01-28
I love this film but the price is a little high. Would buy but just think it should not cost so much. Hope maybe one day I could buy from this site. Thank you.
Nice product but too pricey2007-01-04
It is unlikely that I will purchase this product again as the cost was to expensive for only 3 rolls of film.