Emulsion Speed in history

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I am curious about the history of Emulsion speeds.

What was the iso of the first commercially available film? was it 8 or 12iso? and from this starting point what were the next speeds available and who reached the benchmark for fastest films of their day?

Who was first to make 32iso film? first to reach the 50mark? first to 100?, 200?, 400?, 800?, 1600? 3200? what companies reached the highest iso's first? and when did they do it? Also what were the benchmark products which broke the speed barrier called?
 

ZorkiKat

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Technically speaking, those first films wouldn't have an ISO rating. ISO was introduced around the 1980s and became prevalent some years later. Those films would have equivalent ISOs though. They were rated in Scheiners, H&D's, and then later, Weston, DIN, GE, at least until ASA came along.
 
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sorry my bad, but in these terms who was the who of the speeds? and what was their product called?
 

Ian Grant

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ZorkiKat actually the ISO speed can be equated to its sub-components which do have a much longer history. ASA/BS and DIN. an ISO 100/21° is in fact 100ASA/BS 21°DIN, these aren't an equivalent because they are exactly the same. In the early 60's the ASA/BS system changed doubling the film speeds, the DIN system was always more accurate for practical use.

Ian
 

ZorkiKat

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ZorkiKat actually the ISO speed can be equated to its sub-components which do have a much longer history. ASA/BS and DIN. an ISO 100/21° is in fact 100ASA/BS 21°DIN, these aren't an equivalent because they are exactly the same. In the early 60's the ASA/BS system changed doubling the film speeds, the DIN system was always more accurate for practical use.

Ian

ISO equivalents (or 'translations') for older values -those which antedate the ASA systems- NOT the reassignment of ASA into ISO.

For example, a 1920s NC film would perhaps have a given speed of 250 H&D.
In a modern, ISO-driven context, the 250 rating would sound fast. But when 250 H&D is converted to ISO, it would only be between 8-6.

When the photo-electric exposure meters started coming, there was no standard index yet. So they devised their own: GE and Weston assigned their own values to films (with some cooperation with the makers - for instance "fast" Dupont Superior-3 from the 1930s had a speed of Weston 64, and GE 56). Eventually the makers of both films and meters came together and devised standard indeces like the ASA, which came about in the 1940s.
Weston 64/GE 56 was around 80 ASA.

This 80 ASA contained a 'safety' factor which allowed for discrepancies in the real film speed, as well as meter and shutter/aperture differences. Some overexposure was allowed. The safety factor was removed by the 1960s so that original 80 ASA became 160 ASA- the "improved" Plus-X of the time sped up to 160 from its original 80, but eventually became officially 125.


The DIN system wasn't always that accurate. The different systems in use determined emulsion speed various ways. For instance, DIN was at a time based on exposures which gave an 'optimal' density aim point with prolonged development in a GIVEN type of developer . That wouldn't make the speed index too accurate if the developer in question wasn't available or used. In a 1954 issue of "Leica Fotografie", a writer suggested that the DIN system be revised "in a manner that will have regard to the type of development that is normal to everyday practice".
 
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Photo Engineer

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There was also the "Kodak" speed and a host of others.

It is difficult, if not impossible to answer this question as we cannot even make those old emulsions with reliability today. It is safe to say that based on the exposures I have seen, an ISO range of 3, 6, 12, 24 and etc was evolving from near 1900 onwards. Kodachrome at 10 in the 30s was a step back, as it was color and color film always was slower than B&W film for technical reasons.

PE
 

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In my lifetime, there has been only one bump on the maximum speed scale and that was in the 80s with the introduction of P3200 and Ilfords similar film. For some reason the ISO of P3200 is a secret that you can't find on Kodak's site. I don't have a calibrated sensitometer, but in a relative speed comparison of P3200 against T-Max 400 I found it to be about one stop faster. They do show a characteristic curve here, but the axes are a little crude to determine the speed clearly. http://www.kodak.com/global/en/professional/support/techPubs/f32/f002_0518ac.gif

Having said that I copied this from the internet and claim no responsibility for its content:

Tri-x goes back to WW2 in sheet film; something that the Kodak historians fail to grasp. It is in their own Kodak databooks of the WW2 period as an asa of 200 daylight; 160 in Tungsten in 1945. Roll film tri-x; and trix the breakfast food came out on 1954; maybe the Kodak historians ate too much trix; and lost a decades worth of history. Super-XX was the fast roll film before 1954; then tri-x in roll film came out. Super-XX lived on for many more decades
 

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Hummm,

You know of course, Kodak admits this is not really an ISO 3200 film, but rather one, ah hum, adjusted to give, uh, favorable results if pushed to that speed.

IIRC they identify it as an ISO 1000 film.
 
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amuderick

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Don't forget that Polaroid introduced a 3000 speed film in 1959. At the time, it left the competition in the dust. It is still my favorite...now as the Fuji FP-3000B incarnation.
 

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Any film emulsion when coated on paper support, will give at least 1 stop in speed from back reflection and another stop from the high coated silver level. In actuality, the 3000 speed film was about 800. Kodak had a 3000 speed instant product ready to go when they lost the lawsuit to Polaroid and it was never introduced.

Kodak does indeed indicate that their 3200 film is only very pushable, but then the same is true of the Ilford product. Neither have a true 3200 speed. The highest practical speed is about 800 - 1000 due to keeping. The highest true film speed ever achieved was 25000 and that was done two ways at Kodak. The second was recent, and posted on APUG, the first was only done internally. Keeping on the first material was extremely poor and on the second is unknown as it was only created for lab speed tests.

PE
 

Dirb9

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Any film emulsion when coated on paper support, will give at least 1 stop in speed from back reflection and another stop from the high coated silver level. In actuality, the 3000 speed film was about 800. Kodak had a 3000 speed instant product ready to go when they lost the lawsuit to Polaroid and it was never introduced.

Kodak does indeed indicate that their 3200 film is only very pushable, but then the same is true of the Ilford product. Neither have a true 3200 speed. The highest practical speed is about 800 - 1000 due to keeping. The highest true film speed ever achieved was 25000 and that was done two ways at Kodak. The second was recent, and posted on APUG, the first was only done internally. Keeping on the first material was extremely poor and on the second is unknown as it was only created for lab speed tests.

PE

Polaroid made a 20,000 speed film: Dead Link Removed; it was designed for CRT reproduction. I have no idea what its keeping properties were like, although I imagine they would be pretty bad. I also don't know what the EI is, but I suspect it would be pretty close to the rated speed as you can't really push Polaroid films the same way as you can with normal films.
 

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Thanks for posting this.

I am very fuzzy at the moment, but from what Ron was saying, the emulsion used would probably have had an ISO of about two stops less... but perhaps PE can fill us in more completely on how this works in a polaroid product... that is, how and where the negative fits into the picture, (is the negative backed with a reflective coating??) plus how the extreame contrast affects the sensitivity, if at all.
 
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nemo999

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I am curious about the history of Emulsion speeds.

What was the iso of the first commercially available film? was it 8 or 12iso? and from this starting point what were the next speeds available and who reached the benchmark for fastest films of their day?

Who was first to make 32iso film? first to reach the 50mark? first to 100?, 200?, 400?, 800?, 1600? 3200? what companies reached the highest iso's first? and when did they do it? Also what were the benchmark products which broke the speed barrier called?

If you regard dry plates (invented 1871, well established by 1879/80) as the first commercially available film, you will not find any speed numbers in literature for these, since sensitometry as a precise science was pioneered by Hurter and Driffield, who published their first work in 1890. For a few years after this, plate and film manufacturers avoided publishing speed numbers since the H&D system was open to abuse and allowed absurdly high numbers to be claimed. However, in a copy of the "Dictionary of Photography" (ed. EJ Wall and FJ Mortimer, undated but published I believe before World War I), there is an article testing 4 types of plates using H&D methods which states speeds as 80 - 150 H&D, 150 - 250 H&D, 250 - 325 H&D and 325 - 400 H&D respectively, the groups being more or less high-contrast copy material, slow general material, fast general material, and ultra-fast material giving less image quality and only really useful in extreme situations.

As others have said, different speed systems are based on different methodology and are therefore not directly comparable, but as a ROUGH guide, H&D speed divided by 40 gives some indication of modern ISO speed. The benchmark fast film in England was Ilford HP3, which came out during World War II and was effectively ISO 400. It remained in production until around 1970. What has been striking about film development since then is that the grain and sharpness of fast films have become so much better - T-Max 400 and Delta 400 can be used as standard films, particularly in MF and bigger, whereas Ilford HP3 was extremely grainy in 35 mm (but great in 4x5" and 8x10"!).
 

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Member Gigabitfilm once tried to estimate the speed of the Kodak NO.1 Camera System and he assumed a speed of 50 ASA.
(To my understanding he used different films in the camera and compared shadow detail of the resulting prints with prints of the time.)
 

amuderick

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The Polaroid 612 film had a reflective backing IIRC. Polaroid 667 has a paper backing like all the Polaroid peel-apart films. I once tried a 15 years expired pack of 612. The pods were still good but there was no image.
 

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Member Gigabitfilm once tried to estimate the speed of the Kodak NO.1 Camera System and he assumed a speed of 50 ASA.
(To my understanding he used different films in the camera and compared shadow detail of the resulting prints with prints of the time.)

Yes, speeds of ancient films could be elucidated from photographer exposure notes based on the brightness of the sun.
 

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Polaroid made a 20,000 speed film: Dead Link Removed; it was designed for CRT reproduction. I have no idea what its keeping properties were like, although I imagine they would be pretty bad. I also don't know what the EI is, but I suspect it would be pretty close to the rated speed as you can't really push Polaroid films the same way as you can with normal films.

This is a paper based oscillographic recording material. Kodak made the Ektaline 2000 series papers which were similarly very fast and for the same reasons I described above. They were by no means 20,000 true speed due to gaining some of their speed via reflectance from the paper support.

These products came in long rolls 5" and 10" wide for a variety of "instant" processing machines and were used in huge quantity by Cape Canaveral to record instruments during launch. They were also used by geological surveys and etc., as the papers were more reliable than the inked recorders.

IIRC, they relied on high intensity UV light for exposure and had little visible sensitivity, but my memory may be faulty on this. I know that in the 60s, I was sent from the Cape to Rochester to view the new E2000 setup that was being introduced to compete with the CEC processor which had about 1/2 the speed and sensitivity. Polaroid had no competing product at that time, but Dupont reportedly did. I never saw that product, but we did use CEC stuff until the Kodak product was in full production (CEC = Consolidated Electrodynamics Corporation).

I have a full mental history of high speed papers. AAMOF, the ISO rating of Ilford MGIV is 25 in-camera, even though the emulsion is really only about ISO 6 or so and my ISO 40 film emulsion is ISO 100 - 200 on paper. Even so, a 20,000 speed paper would be a fast emulsion, but who cares about grain and sharpness on a paper?

I did not say a high speed paper could not be done. I repeat, a 20,000 ISO true film emulsion is the highest that has been made. One of the experiments showed it to have very very poor keeping. Results are not in for the newer Gilman emulsion. In the former, you would not like the grain or sharpness, but in the latter, both are pretty good.

PE
 

nemo999

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Member Gigabitfilm once tried to estimate the speed of the Kodak NO.1 Camera System and he assumed a speed of 50 ASA.
(To my understanding he used different films in the camera and compared shadow detail of the resulting prints with prints of the time.)

This may be of interest: In the original Ilford Manual of Photography, first published in 1898, a small advertisement says that Ilford offered "Ordinary" [blue-sensitive] and "Chromatic" [blue/green/sensitive] plates of normal speed, "Empress" plates which were twice as fast, and "Special Rapid" (4 times as fast). Elsewhere in the book, an example is quoted for exposure in June with "Ordinary" plates using f32, sun shining, between 9 am and 3 pm (in other words conditions where the "Sunny 16" rule should apply).
The recommended exposure times are 1/4 to 1/2 sec. for sea and sky, 1 sec. for open landscape, 2 to 4 sec. for landscape with heavy shadows near camera, 5 minutes or more for under trees, 10 minutes to 4 hours for interiors, outdoor portraits 2 to 4 sec.

1 sec. at f32 means 1/4 sec. at f16, so the "Sunny 16" rule should mean that the "Ordinary" plates were the equivalent of ISO 4, with the fastest available plates coming in at ISO 16.

Another basis for guesswork could be the well-known picture by Matthew Brady of the hanging of the Andersonville concentration camp commander Henry Wirz in 1865, where Brady would surely have used full aperture (presumably f8 at the time) and the highest possible shutter speed. Since the picture is blurred, it appears no speed faster than 1/8 was possible. indicating that film speed was no more than ISO 2.
 

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Somewhere I saw a time chart showing how film speeds increased from the late 1800's to the 1970's. The chart also showed how camera use changed as speeds increased and hand held use became more practical, this is when emulsion speeds reach the equivalent of 32-50 ASA (ISO).

Ian
 

Ian Grant

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Note I said "more practical" Ron, but a 10 ASA film in a pre-war hand held roll-film or sheet film camera with a typical lens of max aperture f4.5-f5.6 would be pushing things . . . . except on very bright sunny days :D

Ian
 

ZorkiKat

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C'mon Ian, we did a lot of hand-held Kodachrome 35mm shots that were taken at ASA 10.

PE


Somewhere it's been said that many Leicas from the original Kodachrome era
were "stuck" at f/6,3 @ 1/50sec. For exposures in good daylight. F/6.3 gives good DOF for the average snap-shot , and 1/50 is a stop faster than what's generally considered the limit for hand-held cameras.
 

ZorkiKat

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Note I said "more practical" Ron, but a 10 ASA film in a pre-war hand held roll-film or sheet film camera with a typical lens of max aperture f4.5-f5.6 would be pushing things . . . . except on very bright sunny days :D

Ian

Box cameras which were meant to be used hand-held rather than on tripods were already around before films sped up to more than ASA 10. They had slow maximum openings of f/8 or f/11 and a fixed shutter speed at around 1/25. Lots of snapshots were made- so it meant that hand-held shooting with very slow films wasn't an impossibility. People did make their snapshots in good, not necessarily very bright, sunlight for obvious technical reasons. But then again, that's where the things that they were interested in shooting was- at least more often than not.
 

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Note I said "more practical" Ron, but a 10 ASA film in a pre-war hand held roll-film or sheet film camera with a typical lens of max aperture f4.5-f5.6 would be pushing things . . . . except on very bright sunny days :D

Ian

Ian, I had two box cameras that were used to shoot a lot of ISO 10 and 25 color back in those days. I also have a Kodak Stereo camera that is indexed in terms of Kodachrome 10 film and I took a lot of shots with it.

The stero camera was excellent outdoors and had a small flash unit for indoors. I have boxes of steros, and had a lot of trouble when the ISO 25 films came out.

But, on the whole, I agree with you, that it was pushing things. Underexposures were very common.

PE
 
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