What is WH S "colour print film?"

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mediaseth

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I just bought a roll of this WHS or WH - S, ISO 200, expired in 2003, for chump change, and it's in my Agfa Optima 500. It says return to WHSmith for processing, so I googled that, and apparently it's a store. A British version of Walgreens or CVS, perhaps? I'm not expecting the best in quality. I'm just having fun with it. Being in the States, I'm completely unfamiliar. It's probably re-branded AGFA or something, right?

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"Color print film" is color negative (usually C-41) film, since it is meant to be printed -- as opposed to slide film.
Does it say where it was manufactured? If it was made in Germany, it's probably rebranded Agfa. If Japan, Fuji. If Italy, Ferrania.
 
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mediaseth

mediaseth

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"Color print film" is color negative (usually C-41) film, since it is meant to be printed -- as opposed to slide film.
Does it say where it was manufactured? If it was made in Germany, it's probably rebranded Agfa. If Japan, Fuji.

Thanks. I knew it was C-41. There's no indication of where it was made on the box, and I can't check the cartridge as it's in the camera at the moment, so that may have to wait.
 

railwayman3

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W H Smith is a very well-known UK chain of newsagents and bookstores, with branches in many High Streets, and at airports, train stations, hospitals and motorway service areas. Started out way back in the 1800's with kiosks at railways atations.

I can remember using their C-41 colour negative films......like many own-brand films made for shop chains or the "free films" supplied by processing labs, they were probably made by Ferrania or Agfa. Results were OK, nothing special, much the same as any other similar general-purpose consumer film from the time.
 
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It is a Ferrania film.
 

AgX

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Likely Ferrania films were known to you as Scotch films, as that brand was used during them being owned by 3M.
 

MattKing

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In the 1970s we used to sell them with a 3M name on the box - except where they had our house brand name instead.
 
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