E-6 Slide

E-6 Slide Film Labs in United States

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.

106 labs found

Country-specific coverage

This e-6 slide filter currently covers 106 United States labs across 66 cities. Use the city links below to compare current prices, turnaround, and lab detail pages.

San Diego2 labs
Carlsbad1 labs
New York16 labs
Burien1 labs
Columbus1 labs
Chicago3 labs
Houston2 labs
Tempe1 labs
Tampa1 labs
Nashville2 labs
Boardman1 labs
Tacoma2 labs
Euclid1 labs
Seattle3 labs
Miami2 labs
Boston1 labs
Atlanta1 labs
Hamden1 labs
Knoxville2 labs
Decatur1 labs
Baltimore2 labs
Rockland1 labs
Bath1 labs
Portland2 labs
Dover1 labs
Anchorage1 labs
Orlando1 labs
Honolulu1 labs
Provo1 labs
Wichita1 labs
Edmonds1 labs
Torrance1 labs
Denver1 labs
Dunwoody1 labs
Las Vegas1 labs
Parsons1 labs
Rochester1 labs
Austin1 labs
Gaston1 labs
Boise1 labs
About E-6 Slide

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.

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