runswithsizzers
Subscriber
I just received:
- four rolls of Konica Color VX400 negative film, expired 02-2007, and
- two rolls of Konica Chrome R-100 slide film, expired 03-2002.
I am told the film "has been in the refrigerator since new" - and I am pretty sure "new" means never been sold to a retail customer because I got it from a former Konica dealer. If I shoot the film, it will be digitized (no darkroom printing).
I don't usually mess around with expired color film, so my question is this, Is the possibility that these films might produce halfway-decent results great enough to justify the time and expense of finding out? Or should I just toss them and save myself the aggravation?
By "halfway decent" I mean not too weird. I don't require accurate color, but I do want pleasing colors, and for me, that means no wild color shifts or bizzare color casts. When using modern, in-date films like Portra and Ektar, I do an OK job with color negative inversion using the Negative Lab Pro plug-in for Lightroom but sometimes that can be a struggle. And I had 2 rolls of Fuji slide film that developed and scanned pretty good after 10 years in the freezer. But these Konica films are more than 10 years old and, as far as I know, were not frozen, so...?
After doing a little bit of online reading, it sounds like these films might have been somewhat ordinary when new(?) And I am pretty sure being 17-21 years out-of-date has not made them any better.
If I decide to try them, should I shoot at one-half of rated ISO -- or something else? Processing will be done by a commercial lab.
- four rolls of Konica Color VX400 negative film, expired 02-2007, and
- two rolls of Konica Chrome R-100 slide film, expired 03-2002.
I am told the film "has been in the refrigerator since new" - and I am pretty sure "new" means never been sold to a retail customer because I got it from a former Konica dealer. If I shoot the film, it will be digitized (no darkroom printing).
I don't usually mess around with expired color film, so my question is this, Is the possibility that these films might produce halfway-decent results great enough to justify the time and expense of finding out? Or should I just toss them and save myself the aggravation?
By "halfway decent" I mean not too weird. I don't require accurate color, but I do want pleasing colors, and for me, that means no wild color shifts or bizzare color casts. When using modern, in-date films like Portra and Ektar, I do an OK job with color negative inversion using the Negative Lab Pro plug-in for Lightroom but sometimes that can be a struggle. And I had 2 rolls of Fuji slide film that developed and scanned pretty good after 10 years in the freezer. But these Konica films are more than 10 years old and, as far as I know, were not frozen, so...?
After doing a little bit of online reading, it sounds like these films might have been somewhat ordinary when new(?) And I am pretty sure being 17-21 years out-of-date has not made them any better.
If I decide to try them, should I shoot at one-half of rated ISO -- or something else? Processing will be done by a commercial lab.
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