I have Fujichrome in my fridge, but I won't be chasing any more of it. I'll be shooting Ektachrome. I've always shot Kodak color negative film.
Fuji Superia Premium is a Japanese market only version of Superia, which is said to have it's colour rendition tweaked to better represent the skin tones of Japanese people. Fuji Color 100 should be what used to be known as Superia 100.
I am very happy that I can still buy fresh Provia 100F, because I prefer it to current Ektachrome E100. With Provia I get better sharpness (also proven by the MTF curves of both films), I also got about 10% higher resolution value in my resolution test, also better shadow detail with Provia, not to forget the outstanding and for color films totally unique long exposure characteristic (no exposure compensation needed for exposures up to two minutes!!). And I also prefer the bit warmer color rendition of Provia.
And in 120 format the unique finishing quality with the Easy End Seal, Easy Loading and Barcode system. That is the benchmark in the industry.
In April in Japan, I bought Fujicolor100 with an expiration date of 2027.
It seems like they're still producing the film, given that it has a 2027 expiration date.
I visited several photo stores and the staff didn't know that the X-TRA400 was being discontinued.
Japan also had a lot of complaints about Fujifilm.
I've heard that when a photo shop places an order with Fujifilm, they only receive a small amount, and it's late.
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Can you still get Velvia 50 in 4x5" there?
So there is no reason to buy Fuji slides.
In Korea, many retailers sell Kodak E100 35mm 400ft by the roll, so you can buy a 35mm slide for around $10.
Ah, I wonder why the bulk rolls are nowhere to be found over here.
People are either using a 400’ bulk loader, or more commonly splitting the 400’ into individual 100’ rolls. There are homemade and 3D printed devices for doing so.As someone who loves shooting slide film but doesn't want to pay $20+/roll plus processing, I'm wondering;
a) How are people re-spooling 400' rolls? I have a 100' bulk loader but...
b) Does this affect the processing? Meaning, if I have a self-rolled E100 and I send it to a lab, they'll know what to do with it? Or are these rolls all being home-processed?
Thanks
Just for clarification I meant "will the lab still know to process it E-6 even though it's not in an Ektachrome cartridge". If it's a place you take it in person I imagine you can tell them? And if sending out you make some sort of note? I realize now that my original wording wasn't totally clear.People are either using a 400’ bulk loader, or more commonly splitting the 400’ into individual 100’ rolls. There are homemade and 3D printed devices for doing so.
Nope, it’s just Ektachrome that can be processed in regular E-6 by a lab.
Just for clarification I meant "will the lab still know to process it E-6 even though it's not in an Ektachrome cartridge". If it's a place you take it in person I imagine you can tell them? And if sending out you make some sort of note? I realize now that my original wording wasn't totally clear.
Just for clarification I meant "will the lab still know to process it E-6 even though it's not in an Ektachrome cartridge". If it's a place you take it in person I imagine you can tell them? And if sending out you make some sort of note? I realize now that my original wording wasn't totally clear.
They are easy to find - Eastman Kodak sells them (400 foot rolls) directly to customers as movie film.
On order to find that film packaged as individual rolls you need to find entities that you trust to re-cut those rolls and re-spool them into individual cassettes, and then attend to retailing the individual rolls to end users.
Here is their US price list for motion picture film: https://www.kodak.com/content/produ...-Motion-Picture-Products-Price-Catalog-US.pdf
Ah thanks! I expected them to sell these through B&H and the like, but I guess they don't want too many people knowing how to get a discount.
Ah thanks! I expected them to sell these through B&H and the like, but I guess they don't want too many people knowing how to get a discount.
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