E-6 Slide Film Labs in New Zealand
E-6 is the reversal process used for color slide (transparency) film — Fujifilm Velvia 50 and 100, Fujifilm Provia 100F, and Kodak Ektachrome E100. Unlike a color negative, an E-6 slide is the final positive image you hold up to the light, which means there is no orange mask and no print-stage correction: what comes out of the tank is what you get. The process has six chemical steps rather than C-41's four, runs at a tight 38°C, and demands disciplined maintenance — which is why E-6 service has shrunk globally and many regions now have only a handful of labs still running it. Most remaining E-6 labs batch runs once or twice a week rather than daily, so turnaround is typically 5–10 business days. Browse the verified E-6 labs in the country below.
10 labs found
This e-6 slide filter currently covers 10 New Zealand labs across 6 cities. Use the city links below to compare current prices, turnaround, and lab detail pages.
E-6 Slide Film Developing — What to Know
Why E-6 is harder to find than C-41
E-6 is a six-bath reversal process: first developer, reversal bath, colour developer, pre-bleach, bleach and fix — more than half again as many steps as C-41. The first developer is the critical stage; its timing determines final slide density, and errors there can't be corrected at the scan or print stage because the image itself is the deliverable. Most labs that dropped E-6 did so because volume fell below the point where keeping the chemistry fresh was economically viable — fresh chemistry at the wrong volume is wasted chemistry.
Batch scheduling and turnaround
- Weekly or twice-weekly runs are normal — most labs collect film across several days and run one big batch.
- Turnaround of 5–10 business days is typical for local E-6; mail-in adds shipping time on both ends.
- Push/pull is available at most serious E-6 labs but ask first — pushing Velvia 50 to 100 is common, Provia to 400 is specialist.
- Mounting (cardboard or plastic slide mounts) is usually a paid add-on; scans of unmounted strips are the default these days.
Scanning slide film
Slides scan differently from negatives. Because there's no orange mask to invert, a good E-6 lab should deliver true-to-transparency colour without heavy correction — Velvia should look like Velvia. If you're new to the process, our slide film E-6 developing guide walks through the whole workflow and explains why E-6 labs are worth the wait, and how to choose a film lab covers general lab vetting.