Black & White Film Labs in South Africa
Black and white film developing is fundamentally different from C-41: each roll is processed in a dedicated developer tailored to the film stock (Kodak D-76, Ilford ID-11, Kodak HC-110, Xtol, Rodinal) rather than a single standardised chemistry. Because the process is hand-timed per batch and depends on operator skill, B&W is typically handled in-house by specialist labs rather than drugstore drop-off counters. Popular stocks like Kodak Tri-X 400, Ilford HP5 Plus, Ilford Delta 3200, Kentmere 400 and Fomapan each respond differently to developer choice, dilution and agitation — which is why experienced B&W labs will tell you what developer they use and will happily push or pull one to three stops. The labs listed below for this country are confirmed to process black and white film.
2 labs found
This black & white filter currently covers 2 South Africa labs across 2 cities. Use the city links below to compare current prices, turnaround, and lab detail pages.
Black & White Film Developing — What to Know
Why B&W is handled differently from C-41
Unlike C-41's one-size-fits-all chemistry, black and white developing is a per-batch, per-film-stock process. The lab tech picks a developer, looks up the time in the Massive Dev Chart (or their own house notes), and runs the tank at 20°C with manual or rotary agitation. A 30-second change in developer time or a one-stop change in exposure visibly shifts contrast and grain, which is why B&W is where the craft element of film labs really shows.
Developer choice and what it does to your negatives
- Kodak D-76 / Ilford ID-11 — the universal standard; balanced grain and tonality, forgiving.
- Kodak HC-110 / Ilford Ilfotec HC — concentrated syrup, long shelf life, slightly sharper grain — a favourite for Tri-X.
- Xtol — fine grain and high shadow speed, great for Delta 3200 and Tri-X pushed to 1600.
- Rodinal / Adonal — edge sharpness and visible grain; loved for Fomapan and slow stocks.
Pushing, pulling, and Hi-Res scanning
Most B&W-capable labs will push Tri-X or HP5 one or two stops for a small surcharge — useful for concert or low-light work. When comparing labs, check whether push processing is priced per stop and whether their Hi-Res Default tier includes a dust-spotted scan or charges extra for retouching; B&W picks up every speck in the drying cabinet and retouching time adds up. Our black and white processing guide goes deeper on developer pairings, and how to choose a film lab covers the overall vetting process.