There's a sucker born every minute, time to break out the rock tumbler and get rich!
Why even buy your own tumbler? Just buy tumbled stones in bulk, repackage, and markup the price as required...
There's a sucker born every minute, time to break out the rock tumbler and get rich!
I love this world & how it looks but colours?! to difficult for me.Some people don't like the way this world looks. I just plain don't like this world, but I shoot almost exclusively in color.
So a 15 ips tape may sound subjectively better, but it's not objectively more accurate.
Also, pay no attention to audiophiles. Those guys are nuts.
Thrift stores, estate sales, garage sales and rummage sales.Okay, back to the topic. Where can I buy a brick of Plus X -- where I won't have to take out a bank loan to afford it?
Film gets slower as it ages so shoot it an a lower ASA. Most fresh color negative film do a bit better slightly over exposed. I would shoot your expired Kodak Ultra Gold 400 at ASA 320. I'm sure other people posting will have experience too.An update to this thread: I managed to locate an expired roll of 35mm at home. It's a 36-exposure Kodak Gold Ultra 400. I estimate its age to be between 15-20 years. I would like to use it in one of my vintage 35mm cameras. Any advice on how to get the best out of it?
Don't be surprised if the colours end up being "unusual". The different colour sensitive parts of the emulsion age and change at different rates, so you might end up with something like a tendency toward green shadows and magenta highlights and increased grain.An update to this thread: I managed to locate an expired roll of 35mm at home. It's a 36-exposure Kodak Gold Ultra 400. I estimate its age to be between 15-20 years. I would like to use it in one of my vintage 35mm cameras. Any advice on how to get the best out of it?
An update to this thread: I managed to locate an expired roll of 35mm at home. It's a 36-exposure Kodak Gold Ultra 400. I estimate its age to be between 15-20 years. I would like to use it in one of my vintage 35mm cameras. Any advice on how to get the best out of it?
320.?Film gets slower as it ages so shoot it an a lower ASA. Most fresh color negative film do a bit better slightly over exposed. I would shoot your expired Kodak Ultra Gold 400 at ASA 320. I'm sure other people posting will have experience too.
The sequence of standard ISO speeds found on modern meters is: 800, 640, 500, 400, 320, 250, 200, 160, 125 ....320.?
Not 300 or 200.?![]()
Some people have an overwhelming desire to carry out a challenge. As far as I can tell that can be a hiding for nothing or folk with too much spare time, or knowing better than the manufacturer, or simply money to waste.
Disclaimer: This is all 120 film but still...
I sometimes like the surprise factor of entirely unkown expired film.
Results vary *a lot*, particularly with expired and cross-processed slide film. Not just between film stocks but also sometimes between rolls from the same batch that have been developed at the same lab. You may get the typical turquoise/green/yellow tinge or you may get what's approaching "normal" tones but with exaggerated contrast or anything in between. However, the results nearly always end up being softer than fresh film.
When shooting expired colour negative film, in my experience it depends a lot on the available light. If it's f11 bright sunlight, I shoot at box speed even if the rolls are quite expired. If it's dim, I shoot at half box speed or maybe lower. I feel like there's just a steeper falloff in sensitivity.
These two images are from ten or more years expired Portra 400. The first one I'd say looks pretty normal to me, while with the second one I think you can tell there is something going on:
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So there's definitely an element of frustration, maybe even masochism, but there's also a satisfaction in the amplitude between "good" and "bad" results and working under restrictions. A buddy once said about working in constructions (compared to working a desk job): "When it's good it's great and when it's bad it's awful." Some of my favorite pictures I've taken with Kodak EPP 100 that expired in 2002 or so:
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There you go: sometimes people like predictability and sometimes they like a little bit of the "thrill of the unkown". I'm not wedded to shooting expired film but it can be fun and rewarding.
There is something captivating about the front of that car. Not sure if it would be as interesting in black and white.?
The green car color, orange lights and chrome bumper catch the eye.
But so does the reflection of the trees/bushes in the hood, which is (almost) nothing on its own. But then you notice the leaves on the street, which has an odd connection to the reflection in the hood.
Maybe i am feeling philosophical tonight, and it is just a F'ing car, parked on the road![]()
I've seen adverts for expired 35mm film with expiry dates of 2001, 2004, etc. The price doesn't appear to be much different from fresh 35mm film from what I can tell, maybe a tiny bit cheaper.
There must be a market for it, and I'm intrigued as to the various reasons one might purchase expired film.
Three scenarios:I've seen adverts for expired 35mm film with expiry dates of 2001, 2004, etc. The price doesn't appear to be much different from fresh 35mm film from what I can tell, maybe a tiny bit cheaper.
There must be a market for it, and I'm intrigued as to the various reasons one might purchase expired film.
3. Currently available film that is expired but sold at close to current new price. This is utterly baffling to me. I think many of the sellers are dreamers who think they have something rare and precious. Why buy 10-year-old Tri-X when you can buy it brand new unless the price is drastically reduced (and it never is). Bizarre.
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