Martin Aislabie
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Are films like wines, that need to breathe prior to using? Just wondering...
Paul
They do work best if exposed to photons for awhile before loading into the camera.
Pull the leader out till you get to the end of the roll then rewind it. Place in camera and you will get max saturation in your negatives. This does not work for slide film.
tim in san jose
They do work best if exposed to photons for awhile before loading into the camera.
Pull the leader out till you get to the end of the roll then rewind it. Place in camera and you will get max saturation in your negatives. This does not work for slide film.
tim in san jose
It seems we are slowly loosing the thread on this one.
From Matt Kings commenst it seems that Kodak deliberately undercooked Kodachrome to allow for customer mis-use.
I take Matts & Trevors comments to mean - I am wasting my time letting film age before using it - and I should put it straight into the freezer as soon as I recieve it
Thanks for the advice
Martin
No they did not "undercooked" KR, they simply made a film that was less susceptible to look weird if it were to shift balance or stay for too long on the shelf.
Kodak does not require consumer film to age on tablet; they just made a provision for minimal damage should this be the case.
The comment I referred to comes from a retired Kodak photo engineer who worked on many colour products, so I would rather take his word, than Matt's (no offence, Matt!).
It seems we are slowly loosing the thread on this one.
Thanks for the advice
Martin
In the late 70s, American Photographer magazine ran an fairly extensive interview with the technical photography head at National Geographic Magazine, then generally regarded as having the best color photography in existence. There was considerable discussion of the way that NG would test production lots of Kodak film, select the ones that they liked best, and then carefully track the aging and distribution so that the resulting images would meet uniform standards. (This was pre-Photoshop, so corrections had to be done in analog as part of the printing process.)
No offence taken, Michel.
Note as well that my comments reflect my understanding about older emulsions, in days gone by. I'm not sure, but I expect that it applied the most to the amateur colour print films, and the least to Kodachrome, of all the Kodak films. It was probably unfortunate that I referred to the anecdote that I did.
As I indicated earlier, I don't believe that this applies to modern emulsions, but I do believe that the old procedures explain why this idea is still out there.
Matt
If memory serves, the notion that consumer film was stabilized (i.e.--pre-aged) before release was discussed, acknowledging the fact that the "pro" films could be held to closer tolerances under the assumption that they would be refrigerated until use and therefore not subject to uncontrolled aging.
Lets take the hypothesis that film is aged.
How does film know that 6 months have elapsed or 1 year? How does it know to stop or keep going? How does it know what aging means at all? If film changes at all after manufacture, it keeps changing because it does not 'know' anything else.
It is "KEPT" from changing by anti change agents, and they are gradually used up. Along with that, film is subject to cosmic radiation. So, film is made to an aim and sold at that aim! It stays that way until it can no longer maintain the stability and then begins to 'go'.
PE
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