Hi Everyone,
Can someone tell me what the address for Kodak Switzerland is? I have two addresses so I'm confused as to which I should send my K40 to. Thanks in advance to anyone that replies. (First address is off the 8mm Film Format Metadirectory, 2nd address is as written on the Kodak Mailer.)
Address #1:
Kodak Photo Service SA
av. de Longemalle 1
1020 Renens
SWITZERLAND
Address #2:
Case Postale,
CH-1001 Lausanne,
Switzerland
Regards,
Address to send my K40 to.
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
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Okay, thanks.
Homer, yea, you must be right. I thought about it after I posted the msg, I think the second address is a post office box (Case Postale).
Cheers,
Cheers,
ed
Kodak Photo Service
to Erica
av. de Longemalle 1
1020 Renens
SWITZERLAND
I always add the "To Erica" and include a letter in a regular envelope together with the kodak envelope and ask her to acclimatize the film in the lab for one or two days. This is a regular service, with no additional costs, which Kodak supplies, to prevent getting blue spots on your film. These are caused by getting the film in the lab from a climatic outside environment which is different from the climate in the lab. When the film changes from climates, without acclimatizing for a few hours or so, blue spots can appear on your film.
Blue spots can also appear when you take you film out of the fridge and start filming in a hotter environment immediately, without acclimatizing the film to the new (recording) temperature first, or when you take it to a colder environment from where you kept it. But this kind of acclimatizing you have to watch your self. kodak does the one before processing as a standard service.
Just a tip,
Paul
I got this info and advice straight from kodak itself.
to Erica
av. de Longemalle 1
1020 Renens
SWITZERLAND
I always add the "To Erica" and include a letter in a regular envelope together with the kodak envelope and ask her to acclimatize the film in the lab for one or two days. This is a regular service, with no additional costs, which Kodak supplies, to prevent getting blue spots on your film. These are caused by getting the film in the lab from a climatic outside environment which is different from the climate in the lab. When the film changes from climates, without acclimatizing for a few hours or so, blue spots can appear on your film.
Blue spots can also appear when you take you film out of the fridge and start filming in a hotter environment immediately, without acclimatizing the film to the new (recording) temperature first, or when you take it to a colder environment from where you kept it. But this kind of acclimatizing you have to watch your self. kodak does the one before processing as a standard service.
Just a tip,
Paul
I got this info and advice straight from kodak itself.
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- Posts: 63
- Joined: Tue May 07, 2002 8:27 am
- Location: Hong Kong
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