manfrominternet
Member
Hi all,
The internet is all over the place when it comes to recommending how to shoot expired slides and negatives. When I purchased my Pentax 67II set 2.5 years ago, the seller included some old film stocks he never used, including Provia 100, Astia 100F, and Velvia 100F. I have absolutely no idea how these were stored, but I assume that these were stored in a cooler-than-normal area considering that the seller was a professional photograher. I purchased the 220 version of Portra 400NC a few weeks ago from a camera shop that claimed it was refrigerated since 2006.
Anyway, here again are the film stocks with the expiration dates with some notes:
-220 Provia 100 (expired October 1999) - I'm not sure if this was frozen/refrigerated or not. I kept it in the refrigerator since I bought the Pentax 67II set, so since in October 2020.
-120 Astia 100F (expired January 2005) - Again, I'm not sure if this was frozen/refrigerated or not. I kept it refrigerated since October 2020.
-120 Velvia 100F (expired January 2005) - Yet again, not sure if this was frozen/refrigerated or not. I kept it refrigerated since October 2020.
-220 Portra 400NC (expired October 2006) - I bought this just a few weeks ago from a used camera shop. They had a ton of these 220 Portra 400NC rolls. I was told that the original owner had kept these rolls refrigerated since he bought them in 2005. It has been sitting in my fridge for a month now, since I bought it.
So three of these are slides/transparencies and one is a negative. I've read that the rule of thumb for expired negatives is to expose over by one stop per decade since the expiration date, however, I'm not sure about the slides/transparencies, particularly the Provia that expired in 1999. The obvious thing to do is bracket, but considering that I only have one roll of each, I wouldn't even know where to start the first bracketed frame.
Any suggestions/recommendations on how to expose these would be very greatly appreciated.
The internet is all over the place when it comes to recommending how to shoot expired slides and negatives. When I purchased my Pentax 67II set 2.5 years ago, the seller included some old film stocks he never used, including Provia 100, Astia 100F, and Velvia 100F. I have absolutely no idea how these were stored, but I assume that these were stored in a cooler-than-normal area considering that the seller was a professional photograher. I purchased the 220 version of Portra 400NC a few weeks ago from a camera shop that claimed it was refrigerated since 2006.
Anyway, here again are the film stocks with the expiration dates with some notes:
-220 Provia 100 (expired October 1999) - I'm not sure if this was frozen/refrigerated or not. I kept it in the refrigerator since I bought the Pentax 67II set, so since in October 2020.
-120 Astia 100F (expired January 2005) - Again, I'm not sure if this was frozen/refrigerated or not. I kept it refrigerated since October 2020.
-120 Velvia 100F (expired January 2005) - Yet again, not sure if this was frozen/refrigerated or not. I kept it refrigerated since October 2020.
-220 Portra 400NC (expired October 2006) - I bought this just a few weeks ago from a used camera shop. They had a ton of these 220 Portra 400NC rolls. I was told that the original owner had kept these rolls refrigerated since he bought them in 2005. It has been sitting in my fridge for a month now, since I bought it.
So three of these are slides/transparencies and one is a negative. I've read that the rule of thumb for expired negatives is to expose over by one stop per decade since the expiration date, however, I'm not sure about the slides/transparencies, particularly the Provia that expired in 1999. The obvious thing to do is bracket, but considering that I only have one roll of each, I wouldn't even know where to start the first bracketed frame.
Any suggestions/recommendations on how to expose these would be very greatly appreciated.
