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Developing with Kodak C41 kit
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Developing Colour Film at Home with the Kodak C-41 Kit
The Kodak C-41 Kit is one of the most widely used home film development kits in the world. This guide walks you through the full process, step by step, whether you are developing for the first time or looking to sharpen your technique.
Before You Start
If you have never developed colour film at home before, the idea of mixing multiple chemicals and hitting exact temperatures can feel like a lot. That feeling is completely normal, and this guide is written to make the whole process as clear as possible.
The Kodak C-41 Kit is made by Photo Systems Inc. under license from Kodak, and it is designed specifically for processing colour negative film (C-41 compatible) in small tanks and rotary tube processors. It contains everything you need, from developer to final rinse. One thing worth knowing upfront: the Kodak kit uses a three-part developer concentrate and a two-part bleach, so the mixing stage involves a few more steps than single-part alternatives. Take your time with it and you will be fine.
Like all C-41 chemistry, the process runs through four main stages. The developer reacts with the exposed silver in your film to reveal the image. The bleach converts that silver so the fixer can remove it. The fixer clears the remaining light-sensitive material, making the image permanent. The final rinse protects the finished negative and helps it dry without water marks. Each stage has its own time and temperature, and the key to good results is following them carefully.
If you have an AGO Film Processor, it monitors the temperature of your chemistry throughout the process and automatically adjusts development timing to compensate, so you always get accurate results without managing a water bath manually.
What You'll Need
Get everything on this list together before you mix any chemistry. Having it all within reach before you start makes the process much smoother.
- Kodak C-41 Kit (Developer parts 1A, 1B, 1C; Bleach parts 2A, 2B; Fixer 3; Final Rinse 4)
- Film developing tank and reels (e.g. Paterson or similar)
- Measuring jugs and mixing bottles (preferably amber to protect chemistry from light)
- Accurate thermometer (for 38 °C / 100 °F control)
- Timer or stopwatch
- Protective gloves and safety goggles
- Scissors
- Light-tight changing bag (or access to a darkroom) for loading the film
- Drying clips
Optional but highly recommended: The AGO Film Processor monitors your chemistry temperature and adjusts development timing automatically, so you always get accurate results without babysitting a water bath.
About the Kodak C-41 Kit
The kit is a non-replenisher design, meaning you use the chemistry and discard it rather than topping it up between sessions. It is designed for small tank and rotary tube processing, which makes it well suited to home use. All chemicals are supplied as concentrates that you dilute to working solution before use.
Kit variants: The kit is available in 2.5 L and 5 L sizes. The mixing ratios below are for 1 L working solutions, calculated by dividing the 2.5 L kit volumes by 2.5. When using the AGO Film Processor, rotational agitation uses less chemistry than manual inversion, which means you may get more rolls out of a single kit than the standard capacity figures suggest.
Mixing the Chemistry
The Kodak kit involves more parts than some other C-41 kits, but the mixing process is straightforward if you go through each chemical in order. Always add concentrates to water, never the other way around. Use distilled or demineralised water where possible to avoid drying spots on your negatives.
1 - Developer (three parts)
870 ml water + 75 ml Part A + 18 ml Part B + 38 ml Part C → 1 L working solution.
Add the parts in order: A, then B, then C. Top up with water to reach 1 L.
2 - Bleach (two parts)
400 ml water + 200 ml Part A + 400 ml Part B → 1 L working solution.
Add Part A first, then Part B.
3 - Fixer
800 ml water + 200 ml concentrate → 1 L working solution.
4 - Final Rinse
991 ml water + 9 ml Part A → 1 L working solution.
Storage tip: Store all mixed chemistry in clean, airtight bottles with as much air expelled as possible. Keep concentrates in their original packaging if mixing less than the full kit volume.
Loading the Film
This step must be done in complete darkness. Use a light-tight changing bag or a darkroom. Open your film canister, cut off the leader, and load the film onto your developing reel. Place the loaded reel inside your tank and seal it tightly before turning any lights on. Once the tank is sealed, the rest of the process can be done in normal room light.
Step-by-Step Developing Process
The times below are for use with the AGO Film Processor. If you are developing manually, refer to the process summary table further down.
Step 1 Pre-Warm: 38-45 °C, 3:00 min Optional
Warming the film and tank before adding developer helps avoid a cold-start temperature drop that can affect your results. This step is optional but recommended, especially if your tank or room is on the cooler side.
The recommended method is to warm the outside of the sealed tank in a water bath at 38-45 °C. Do not pour warm water into the tank itself and do not pre-soak the film in water, as this can interfere with development.
Using the AGO Film Processor? If you are skipping the pre-warm, start your developer 2-4 °C higher than the target temperature to compensate for the cold tank absorbing heat when the chemistry first enters. The AGO will then track the actual temperature and adjust timing accordingly.
Step 2 Developer: 38 °C, 3:15 min
This is the most critical step. Pour the developer in quickly and start your timer. Temperature accuracy here matters a great deal as even a small shift will affect your colours and density. The AGO Film Processor monitors this for you and adjusts timing accordingly.
Agitation (manual small tank): 30 sec continuous agitation at the start, then 2 sec every 30 sec.
Step 3 Bleach: 24-41 °C, 6:30 min
The bleach converts the metallic silver created during development into a form the fixer can remove. Without this step your negatives would come out very dark. Agitate for 30 sec at the start, then 5 sec every 30 sec.
Step 4 Wash: 24-41 °C, 1:30 min
Rinse with running water at a rate that fills the tank roughly every 4 seconds. Alternatively, fill the tank, agitate for 5 sec, and dump. Repeat throughout the wash time. This clears bleach residue before fixing.
Step 5 Fixer: 24-41 °C, 6:30 min
The fixer removes all remaining light-sensitive silver from the film, making the image stable and permanent. After this step your film is no longer light-sensitive and can be handled in normal light. Agitate for 30 sec at the start, then 5 sec every 30 sec.
Step 6 Wash: 24-41 °C, 3:15 min
A second wash to clear fixer residue from the film. Use the same running water or fill-and-dump method as the first wash.
Step 7 Final Rinse: 24-41 °C, 1:30 min
The final rinse protects the dye layers in your negatives and helps the film dry without water marks or spots. Agitate for 30 sec at the start; no further agitation is needed after that.
⚠ Do not rinse the film after the final rinse step
Drying the Film
Once the final rinse is done, carefully remove the film from the reel and hang it with drying clips in a clean, dust-free space. Attach a clip at the top to hang it and a weighted clip at the bottom to prevent curling. Leave it to dry fully before cutting or scanning, as handling wet film can cause scratches and marks that cannot be undone.
Process Summary
A quick reference for all steps. Bookmark this page so you can check it during development.
| Step | Temp (°C) | AGO Time | Manual Time | Agitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Warm (optional) | 38-45 | 3:00 min | 2:00-6:00 min | Warm outside of tank only, no water inside |
| Developer | 38 ± 0.5 | 3:15 min | 3:15 min | 30 s continuous, then 2 s / 30 s |
| Bleach | 24-41 | 6:30 min | 6:30 min | 30 s continuous, then 5 s / 30 s |
| Wash | 24-41 | 1:30 min | 1:30 min | Running water or fill and dump |
| Fixer | 24-41 | 6:30 min | 6:30 min | 30 s continuous, then 5 s / 30 s |
| Wash | 24-41 | 3:15 min | 3:15 min * | Running water or fill and dump |
| Final Rinse | 24-41 | 1:30 min | 1:30 min | 30 s continuous; no further agitation |
* The datasheet lists the second wash as "as needed" for small tanks. 3:15 min is the AGO-confirmed time for consistent results.
Tips for Better Results
- Temperature is the single most important variable. Keep developer at 38 °C as even small shifts will affect your colours and density.
- Pour the developer into the tank quickly. Slow pouring can cause uneven development and streaks on the negative.
- The AGO Film Processor monitors chemistry temperature throughout the process and adjusts timing automatically, removing the guesswork entirely.
- Use distilled or demineralised water when mixing chemistry to avoid drying spots. If only tap water is available, mix it with distilled water in a 1:2 ratio.
- Make sure your developing tank and reels are thoroughly clean before use. Residue from previous chemicals can contaminate the developer and cause colour fog.
- Store mixed chemistry in sealed bottles with as much air expelled as possible. Keep concentrates in their original packaging if you are not mixing the full kit volume at once.
- The developer is the most sensitive chemical in the kit. If your negatives are coming out too dark or too light, adjusting developer time by 15-30 seconds is usually the first thing to try.
Chemistry Shelf Life
Keeping your chemistry well stored makes a real difference to consistency between sessions. Here are Kodak's guidelines:
| Chemical | Concentrate (unopened/opened) | Working solution (sealed) |
|---|---|---|
| Developer | 12 weeks | 1 week |
| Bleach | 24 weeks | 24 weeks |
| Fixer | 24 weeks | 24 weeks |
| Final Rinse | Indefinite | Indefinite |
The developer working solution has a notably short shelf life of just one week once mixed. Mix only what you need for a session and use it promptly.
Common Issues and Fixes
If something looks off with your negatives, here are the most common causes and what to do about them.
| Issue | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Negatives too dark | Overexposure or developer time too long | Shorten developer time by 15-30 sec |
| Negatives too light | Underexposure, pre-warm skipped, or developer time too short | Add a 3-5 min pre-warm, or extend developer time by 15-30 sec |
| Colour fog or cast | Contaminated developer or dirty reels | Rinse all equipment thoroughly before next session |
| Drying spots | Hard tap water used for final rinse | Mix tap water with distilled water in a 1:2 ratio |
| Uneven streaks | Developer poured too slowly or pre-warm skipped | Pour developer quickly and always do the pre-warm step |
| Negatives appear magenta | Insufficient bleach or fix | Re-bleach and re-fix the film, then re-dry |
Your First Roll Is Closer Than You Think
The Kodak C-41 Kit has more mixing steps than some alternatives, but once your chemistry is prepared, the actual development process is calm and methodical. Take your time with the mixing, keep your developer at temperature, and follow each step in order.
The first time you pull a developed roll from the tank and hold your negatives up to the light, knowing you did the whole thing yourself, is a genuinely great moment. The process gets faster and easier with every roll.
If you have questions about the process or need help getting started with the AGO Film Processor, feel free to reach out. We are always happy to help you get your first roll developed.
Updated on 13 Feb 2026