Excerpts from an exchange I recently had with a retailer via the Internet:
-----Original Message-----
Subject: Kodachrome 64 vs. Kodachrome 64 Professional
Hello,
I notice a $5 price difference between K64 and K64 Professional.
Is the difference simply matching emulsions and optimum aging before shipment, as with other identical emulsions that come in both pro and consumer varieties?
Is it possible to get any of your plain K64 with matching emulsions? I am going to need to purchase about 40 rolls, and possibly as many as 60.
Thanks for your time.
Subject: RE: Kodachrome 64 vs. Kodachrome 64 Professional
"Thank you for the E-mail. Our Distribution Center handles a large volume of orders daily. There is no way we can guarantee that any order will be shipped with product of the same emulsion numbers.
"We can request it on the order to pull product with the same emulsion number, but we can't guarantee it.
"All sensitized products have either emulsion or batch numbers.
"There is a difference between the pro film vs. the amateur film besides the price. The PKR is more archival (according to Kodak) and has a little more latitude.
"I checked stock on both films at or Distribution Center...and what I do know is that PKR Professional: we have 16 rolls in stock all with an expiration date of 6/20/09. KR Amateur: we have 37 rolls in stock all with an expiration date of 10/20/09. This suggests to me that what we have in stock for each type is of the same emulsion number."
Back to me writing:
Normally, the difference between pro and amateur films that share the same exact emulsion is the following:
1. Pro versions are allowed to age to optimum color balance before they are delivered for sale to the public. Amateur films are delivered right away with no regard to age, as it is assumed they will sit longer before being shot than pro films, and that they will be printed on an automated machine with little-to-no criticism of color balance by consumers, and no need for color to match exactly from one roll to another.
2. Pro versions are available in bulk packages with matching emulsion batches.
3. Pro versions are 36 exposures, while amateur versions come in 36, 24, and perhaps 12 exposure lengths.
Fuji Superia and Fuji Press is an example of all of the above. (The latter is the "pro" version.) Dead identical emulsions, but with added features that only a more advanced - and probably only a professional - photographer will need and/or appreciate. These things really matter as far as lab hours are concerned when you are shooting multiple rolls on the same shoot.
Then there are emulsions that *only* come in the professional varieties, such as Fuji Pro and Kodak Portra. They meet all the above criteria, but simply have no amateur equivalent, aside from a consumer purchasing a loose roll or two that have been sitting there for who knows how long at the cheesy camera store up the street , thus eliminating all the "pro" benefits even though it is a "pro" film.
...but according to Kodak's claims, of which I became aware via the above exchange, KR and PKR are not the same emulsion....strange, and frankly hard to fathom/believe, personally.