Donald Qualls
Subscriber
Years ago, there was 35mm color film sold at very good prices that was advertised as offering both prints and slides from the same roll -- but only if you had it processed by the seller, either by mail or at one of their parking lot kiosks. I now know this was one of the early ventures in bringing cine films to still photography, it was remjet backed ECN-2 film and they would *print* it to a "release positive" film to provide the slides, as well as printing to whatever color print paper was in use then (this was the 1980ss, C-41 was new).
I was thinking about this film the other day, along with some of the other cine stocks that are now showing up from vendors like Film Photography Project -- and it occurred to me that the main reason we have the distinction between slide film and color negative is a quirk of the early color printing papers (a strong color cast) that requires color negative film be formulated with the familiar orange mask.
If color film were being reinvented now, with modern know-how, would it be possible to create color print paper that doesn't have that cast, that produces a color-true negative image (with, presumably, a color-true positive if processed by reversal), allowing for a film that could be either positive slides or color negatives (or B&W negatives or slides, for that matter, since it wouldnt' need a mask) depending on processing choice?
In other words, might the long-term future of still film include a convergence of the three kinds we have now, along with the similar options available in cine stocks, into a single film, maybe in multiple speeds but otherwise all the same? Economies of scale would surely apply; it'd be cheaper to make one stock for everything than to run multiple production lines.
Is this even technically possible, essentially coating paper with Ektachrome type emulsion, and taking everything from there?
I was thinking about this film the other day, along with some of the other cine stocks that are now showing up from vendors like Film Photography Project -- and it occurred to me that the main reason we have the distinction between slide film and color negative is a quirk of the early color printing papers (a strong color cast) that requires color negative film be formulated with the familiar orange mask.
If color film were being reinvented now, with modern know-how, would it be possible to create color print paper that doesn't have that cast, that produces a color-true negative image (with, presumably, a color-true positive if processed by reversal), allowing for a film that could be either positive slides or color negatives (or B&W negatives or slides, for that matter, since it wouldnt' need a mask) depending on processing choice?
In other words, might the long-term future of still film include a convergence of the three kinds we have now, along with the similar options available in cine stocks, into a single film, maybe in multiple speeds but otherwise all the same? Economies of scale would surely apply; it'd be cheaper to make one stock for everything than to run multiple production lines.
Is this even technically possible, essentially coating paper with Ektachrome type emulsion, and taking everything from there?