illawarraflametree
Member
Hello everyone. The other week I nabbed a bulk roll of expired film for cheap cheap cheap on ebay. I was actually buying two pretty grotty bulk loaders with the intention of testing them, cleaning them up and maybe taking them apart and fixing any problems before maybe going on to resell them. However one of them came loaded with a mystery roll of bulk film!
This is what the label on the outside of the loader looked like before I cleaned it off:
VPS 160 -- after some googling (and I'd like to impress here the point that google is increasingly useless)... a bulk roll of Kodak Vericolor 160, right? "Cool to find a bulk roll of C-41, time to bracket a test roll and find out the optimal speed, who knows when it expired!" I think to myself.
Anyway, I finish loading the rest of the roll and labeling the resulting canisters as (prospective) C-41 film for my future reference. Then, with some difficulty, I pry open the loader and I'm greeted with this:
What the--?! It seems possible but exceedingly unlikely to me that someone loaded a bulk Kodak film onto a Fuji spool. This is what the film sticking out of the final canister looked like:
Now while I was cleaning the grotty label on the bulk loader off, I noticed there was another grotty label underneath. I can't really tell what it actually said though because it was covered in sticker gunk, paper, and texta bleedthrough from the top layer, but what I did read was what looked to be "Vel" (the rest was cut off) and "400". This doesn't make any sense to me as I don't believe there was ever a 400 speed Velvia, and nothing in "Neopan" resembles "Vel"... I read somewhere else on this forum that Fuji did used to sell bulk rolls of Velvia at a point so at least it's possible for it to be Velvia, but I can't explain what the 400 is supposed to mean if it is.
Finally, here's what the film looks like on the base and emulsion sides:
And here are Velvia 100 and Neopan 400:
If anybody has any insights to offer I would appreciate it!
I'm still going to bracket and shoot a test roll anyway. I'll develop it in C-41 as that's the cheapest and the edge markings should tell us everything we need to know anyway... But my 35mm camera is currently occupied and I'd love to find out what this is sooner rather than later just because I'm impatient lol
This is what the label on the outside of the loader looked like before I cleaned it off:
VPS 160 -- after some googling (and I'd like to impress here the point that google is increasingly useless)... a bulk roll of Kodak Vericolor 160, right? "Cool to find a bulk roll of C-41, time to bracket a test roll and find out the optimal speed, who knows when it expired!" I think to myself.
Anyway, I finish loading the rest of the roll and labeling the resulting canisters as (prospective) C-41 film for my future reference. Then, with some difficulty, I pry open the loader and I'm greeted with this:
What the--?! It seems possible but exceedingly unlikely to me that someone loaded a bulk Kodak film onto a Fuji spool. This is what the film sticking out of the final canister looked like:
Now while I was cleaning the grotty label on the bulk loader off, I noticed there was another grotty label underneath. I can't really tell what it actually said though because it was covered in sticker gunk, paper, and texta bleedthrough from the top layer, but what I did read was what looked to be "Vel" (the rest was cut off) and "400". This doesn't make any sense to me as I don't believe there was ever a 400 speed Velvia, and nothing in "Neopan" resembles "Vel"... I read somewhere else on this forum that Fuji did used to sell bulk rolls of Velvia at a point so at least it's possible for it to be Velvia, but I can't explain what the 400 is supposed to mean if it is.
Finally, here's what the film looks like on the base and emulsion sides:
And here are Velvia 100 and Neopan 400:
If anybody has any insights to offer I would appreciate it!
I'm still going to bracket and shoot a test roll anyway. I'll develop it in C-41 as that's the cheapest and the edge markings should tell us everything we need to know anyway... But my 35mm camera is currently occupied and I'd love to find out what this is sooner rather than later just because I'm impatient lol