I'm a 'variable speed photographer'. That means I go through intense photo periods where I shoot constantly or many rolls of film, and the opposite where I shoot little. In the past year or so I've been slow, with a couple 'bursts'; mostly depending on location/inspiration.
Anyway, last autumn I shot about 55 rolls of colo(u)r 35mm on a month-long bicycle tour in the Lake Superior country, including finally a few rolls of the CR200 I bought back in 2013... (the kind in the double can; type 812212, frozen of course). I waited so long since I have a good stash of Kodak, Fuji E6 films and other stuff and read so much about the 'yellow' tendency with this film that I figured I'd wait until the right 'palette' was presented (which didn't seem to 'fit' interior Alaska where I live).
So last weekend I finally developed some of the rolls in Tetenal E6 3-step (also my practice; to shoot a lot of film then develop when I have ~100 rolls in film freezer then rapid-fire develop in long sessions to save $$ on chems).
I haven't got any scanned yet, but in my cursory look at them I was super-pleased with the greens, golds, yellows, browns. The best ones were in a autumn color mixed yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis)-white cedar (Thula occidentalis)-balsam fir (Abies balsamea) forest in Keweenaw County, Michigan near the shore of Lake Superior (I have a little camp there!). The greens of the forest moss, fir and white-cedar leaves and the yellow of the birch leaves and some senescent understory plants, the silver and gold of the birch bark (live and rotting on forest floor) and the browns and grays of the leaf litter, all in soft overcast light seems to be the 'proper habitat' of this film! [I am a geobotanist hence the Latin names, toponyms, geographic description, etc.]
Definitely the weirdest slide film I've used since my favorite Orwo UT21 & UT18 (East German) films of the early 90s I used to buy cheap and shoot freely when living in the xUSSR then. (and the 'best' with the '70s oranges, greens, and browns). I think CR200 would also be good for photographing a 1970s interior with orange, brown, or green shag carpet, loud flowery curtains, brown paneling, orange or yellow bakelite ashtrays, 1970s heavy glassware, Schlitz cans, etc... getting nostalgic just typing this.
So after all that wait I decide I can use this film and where it 'flowers'. But now I check and see that it's been maybe re-something'd. Is the stuff that FS and BH selling the same film as the stuff I bought in 2013?
Last I checked there wasn't much consensus on just what CR200 really was, how old, etc. Is the 'new' stuff any better identified? It's sure more expen$ive than the 'old' stuff! How do the palettes compare?