Minoltafan2904
Member
Some random guy on Reddit says he has sources saying they will both be E6 films, hasn't linked or cited any though lol
Some random guys also say Corona is just a flue and the earth is flat...Some random guy on Reddit says he has sources saying they will both be E6 films, hasn't linked or cited any though lol
Some random guy on Reddit says he has sources saying they will both be E6 films, hasn't linked or cited any though lol
Be careful what you ask for... it could be a booby prize. (For our non-native-English speaking members... that has nothing to do with female anatomy.)So if it's Kodachrome III in E-6 do I win a prize?
What does that mean?Medium Format shooters aren't going to flock to Kodak Gold 200, it's an amateur film.
What does that mean?
There are lengthy threads about how an E-6 technology film that looks like Kodachrome could be made, but it would involve CD-6 developer/ couplers and modified processing.
Unlikely.
I think that most people using 120 *are* amateurs....
Point-n-shoot film type. Nothing special. Medium format gear is too pricey. Using Hasselblad to load Kodak Gold 200 is like going to McDonald's for a salad bowl.
The people using film now could care less how the film is formulated. Kodak could take a B&W film, slap Kodachrome on it and it would sell like hotcakes.
I'm sticking to my guns and saying E-6 Kodachrome III. I'll even say it'll be Ektachrome just relabeled as Kodachrome 64.
This was a great film.Provia 400X
K25 was extremely sharp indeed.The Kodachrome 25 had much finer grain, was sharper -probably the sharpest film ever- and had better colours than the 64. Simply 25 blows 64 out of the water.
More than great, simply amazing.This was a great film.
K25 was extremely sharp indeed.
Though compared to Velvia 50 in my opinion they are nearly identical, ( in terms of sharpness ) otherwise they are completely different.
The Kodachrome 25 had much finer grain, was sharper -probably the sharpest film ever- and had better colours than the 64. Simply 25 blows 64 out of the water.
K25 was extremely sharp indeed.
Though compared to Velvia 50 in my opinion they are nearly identical, ( in terms of sharpness ) otherwise they are completely different.
True, Velvia 50 was introduced in 1990 and quickly became a "must try" film, giving K25 some harsh competition. But that being said, the present edition of Velvia 50 is too cartoonish in respect of colour reproduction.
There's a real market for a real infrared film. The Ilford offering has near infrared but it's not something that peaks in the 820-850 nm range.
Kodachrome is a incredibly valuable brand. A icon. There's no reason that E6 films can't be formulated to have the Kodachrome look.
I suppose it would be possible to resurrect "real Kodachrome" I don't think it's necessary, just make a transparency film that looks like Ektar and call it Kodachrome III.
There's plenty of 125 speed neg film, FP4 Plus and TMX work for me.
HIE makes the most sense because no one else has anything like it..
Medium Format shooters aren't going to flock to Kodak Gold 200, it's an amateur film.
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