dude, its no joke !
while i know others who
say they can tell between shelf stored film
and stuff that was frozen or kept cold i am
guessing it is like a former colleague of mine
who INSISTED he could tell the differnce between
a file made print and a film made print, and he couldn't ...
im happy people are happy freezing and keeping their film cold
it gives them the piece of mind that they are doing something proactive
in their storage, and helping with their photography ...
i've noticed no difference between fresh new film, film that was cold before i used it
and stuff i just had in a bag on the floor in the corner of the room.
==
i must admit though, i never used to buy more than i could shoot in a few weeks or a month's time
but then i nearly ran out of $$ so i bought a bunch of film, i still have and use some of this purchase
( in 1993 ) and it has sat in a lucite "film" box on a shelf in my studio and in a storage bag in a former
studio that reached 100 degrees some days in the hot summer months ( kiln of a brick building, no air conditioning ) ..
then i got a deal on some 5x7 film from a friend
i couldn't pass up " a few boxes for 20$ ) it turned out it was 20 100 sheet boxes
and then a couple of apug friends had bunches of 120 film i had to buy ... none of it cold stored ..
im not worried about it .. i am sure if i had a densitometer i'd be freaking out though.
not sure if all that fog was my coffee/vit c developer or background noise ...
after i click "save changes" i'm going to keep an eye out for people who might want to bump me off
since i am blowing the lid off of this whole thing ... ( i don't keep batteries in my refrigerator either )
like a politician said a few years back " to get at the suger lobby you have to go behind the corn lobby"
maybe "to get to the cold film thing, you have to go behind the cold battery thing
almost forgot
YMMV