How to tell expiry of 35mm slide film

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BetterSense

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I found a roll of slide film in my stash. It does not have a date on it since film companies never seem to print the date where it matters, only on the box.

Is there any way I can discover the expiry based on the edge codes if I pull off and develop a few inches?
 

Fixcinater

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You can't get close by looking at the design of the canister? Seems like the majority of manufacturers changed up the logos every so often, that should get you close enough, wouldn't you think?

Sure, 3rd quarter of 1998 would be ideal but wouldn't "late 90s" be accurate enough in this case?
 
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BetterSense

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Well, I need to know if it expired by more than a couple years. A roll lasts me an easy 6 months and between that and processing costs, I can't afford to gamble. I may end up throwing away a perfect roll of film if I can't determine the age.
 

CatLABS

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Well, I need to know if it expired by more than a couple years. A roll lasts me an easy 6 months and between that and processing costs, I can't afford to gamble. I may end up throwing away a perfect roll of film if I can't determine the age.

Seems like there is an easy answer for you here - when in doubt, throw it out.
Buy new film, its better for everyone, especially you.
 

clayne

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Throw it out film? That's crazy talk. When in doubt, use it for something that can have some doubt.
 

gone

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No, it's good advice. Or sell it on ebay. Why go to the bother and expense of shooting film that you don't know is any good?
 
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BetterSense

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So, when i get processed film back, it has tons of barcode info in the sprocket areas. What does it mean? I assumed it had information like the film type, speed etc.
 

lhalcong

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I wouldn't throw it away and I wouldn't use it for something important. I would use it for whatever else you may have that is not critical. Or if possible for you to do, develop a clip of two/three frames as test shots to see how it renders.
 

StoneNYC

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No, it's good advice. Or sell it on ebay. Why go to the bother and expense of shooting film that you don't know is any good?

Yup, sell it as "Lomo" and charge double what new film costs haha

So, when i get processed film back, it has tons of barcode info in the sprocket areas. What does it mean? I assumed it had information like the film type, speed etc.

Yes it does, google it.

How am I going to develop test frames of E-6?

Take a test clip of an unexposed piece of the film, stand develop one hour in Rodinal 1:100, then stop/fix as normal. You'll get the silver to develop and can read the data of the edges.
 

clayne

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No, it's good advice. Or sell it on ebay. Why go to the bother and expense of shooting film that you don't know is any good?

You shoot one roll to determine if it's good. It's not that hard. The people shouting about not using anything but new film are simply being stubborn for the sake of it.

Any of you people who don't want your old "trash" send it my way please.
 

StoneNYC

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You shoot one roll to determine if it's good. It's not that hard. The people shouting about not using anything but new film are simply being stubborn for the sake of it.

Any of you people who don't want your old "trash" send it my way please.

+1
 

E. von Hoegh

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Well, I need to know if it expired by more than a couple years. A roll lasts me an easy 6 months and between that and processing costs, I can't afford to gamble. I may end up throwing away a perfect roll of film if I can't determine the age.

Keep it for testing a camera/cameras, even if the color is completely wacked out you can still learn a lot - shutter accuracy, focus accuracy, meter, etc.
 

StoneNYC

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Keep it for testing a camera/cameras, even if the color is completely wacked out you can still learn a lot - shutter accuracy, focus accuracy, meter, etc.

You won't learn anything about exposure from expire film because you won't have a baseline.

Focus accuracy, sure, but not meter or shutter
 

lxdude

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Use it for situations where exposure and color are more subjective- like night shots and sunsets.
 

E. von Hoegh

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You won't learn anything about exposure from expire film because you won't have a baseline.

Focus accuracy, sure, but not meter or shutter

Did I say you would?? Even if the exposure is wrong due to an unknown EI, you can still tell if it's consistent. If you get the same exposures at f4 and 1/1000 as you get at f16 and 1/60, the shutter's useable. If the meter gives consistent exposures under varying conditions, the meter's likely useable.
Not really feasible with E-6 due to the processing cost, but you could even cross process it (cheap c41 minilab) and learn things.
 
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