Film longevity
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Posted 13/01/2009 - 11:06
I went rummaging for some old pictures to use in a project I'm working on and came across some boxes of transparencies stored in reasonable conditions - dry, dark and cool - but nothing to impress a museum curator! This is Kodachrome 64 from 1975
![]() Spotmatic F and 28mm SMC Takumar and polarizer I think I'm quite amazed that it looks as good as new. Kodak processed Ektachrome looks OK but 3rd party lab and home processed are a bin case being either totally cyan or magenta now. Anyone have similar experiences? Another small thing to mention, I use a Minolta scanner whose software doesn't work with Vista or so I thought. Then one day all was fine. I hadn't realised until reading this week's AP that downloading the trial version of Vuescan sorts the problem out. This is what I had unwittingly done. Ken "Colour is the fruit salad but black and white is the main meal" Don McCullin
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Posted 13/01/2009 - 11:28
Kodachrome films have a unique structure where the dyes are in the processing chemicals rather than in the emulsion. This gives very good colour, very fine grain and almost copmplete resistance to fading providing they are kept cool, dry and dark. The downside is that the processing is a very complex and expensive process.
If you continually project slides though, the Kodachromes will fade faster under light than an E6 film will. Original 1936 Kodachromes are in storage at Kodak and still retain their colour. Best regards, John Riley
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Posted 13/01/2009 - 14:02
My slide archive doesn't go quite that far back - but my Fuji Chrome 50 & 100 is pretty good - my bad slides are ones where I had a case of "short arms/deep pockets" and didn't sling out out of date film - then it's got a green cast.
I have found some 1980 or 81 slides which came from a home/self processing pack - can't remember the brand - started with a 'B' IIRC. Still damn good Steve In the Pack:K7,K20&K10+BGs,MZSx2+BGs,DA10-17,DA12-24,DA14,DA*16-50,DA*50-135,FA31mm/43mm/77mm Ltds,Sigma 150-500 Half Backs: istDx2,DA16-45,DA18-50,DA50-200,Sigma 135-400 Backs: LXs,Super As and lots of M & K lenses Impact Subs: 28mm Shift, K 135-600, 400-600 Reflex Last Edited by Steve Chasey on 13/01/2009 - 16:34
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Posted 13/01/2009 - 20:34
My old Kodachrome slides are still pretty damn good (they go back to 1982) but the "Boots" slide films fade. By the way gartmore, don't bin those slides. Our photographer has quite some success scanning old slides and restoring the colour in PS. His biggest success was scanning a set of slides which had been developed accidentally as print films and restoring those to close to what they should be.
Cheers, Kris. Kris Lockyear 35mm film: too many! Mainly using my LX, along with some others. Horseman LE 5x4 view camera Digital: K10D, K20D DA 12-24mm, 43mm Ltd, SMC-K 200 f/4, SMC-K 135mm f/2.5, SMC-K 50mm f/1.2, SMC-K 15mm f/3.5, SMC-M 100mm f/2.8, Jupiter-9 85mm, Sigma 50mm macro, amongst others.
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Posted 13/01/2009 - 23:24
Some senior lectures still use slides made during seventies for teaching at the university I work.
The kodak 35mm slide projectors (some of them 15 years old) are real workhorses and I have seen some of the best images of geography, landscapes and architecture projected on large projection screen in lecture rooms. As john and kris mentioned keeping them in cool,dry and dark environment would maintain their quality for printing or scanning in future. Last Edited by Vikramkeshvala on 13/01/2009 - 23:25
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Posted 14/01/2009 - 01:54
I got copies made of my favourite teaching slides because they started to fade. Now I have them all scanned and in powerpoint. The amount of time I used to spend sorting 35mm slides in and out of magazines for lectures seems incredible now. Getting all my lectures in powerpoint was a right royal pain at the time, but in the long run has saved me many hours of sorting. Now I just project slides for fun. Nothing quite like a Kodachrome 25 ASA slide on a big screen!
Cheers, Kris. Kris Lockyear 35mm film: too many! Mainly using my LX, along with some others. Horseman LE 5x4 view camera Digital: K10D, K20D DA 12-24mm, 43mm Ltd, SMC-K 200 f/4, SMC-K 135mm f/2.5, SMC-K 50mm f/1.2, SMC-K 15mm f/3.5, SMC-M 100mm f/2.8, Jupiter-9 85mm, Sigma 50mm macro, amongst others.
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Posted 14/01/2009 - 08:20
gartmore wrote: I went rummaging for some old pictures to use in a project I'm working on and came across some boxes of transparencies stored in reasonable conditions - dry, dark and cool - but nothing to impress a museum curator! This is Kodachrome 64 from 1975 ![]() Spotmatic F and 28mm SMC Takumar and polarizer I think I'm quite amazed that it looks as good as new. Kodak processed Ektachrome looks OK but 3rd party lab and home processed are a bin case being either totally cyan or magenta now. Anyone have similar experiences? Another small thing to mention, I use a Minolta scanner whose software doesn't work with Vista or so I thought. Then one day all was fine. I hadn't realised until reading this week's AP that downloading the trial version of Vuescan sorts the problem out. This is what I had unwittingly done. Hi, If this is any use, when I worked for Ford Motor Company Pilot Plant, the Ford Photographic Department was located within the same site. All the film that Ford used, was stored in refridgerators, to protect and stabilize the emulsions, and were usable after the use by date!
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Posted 14/01/2009 - 08:51
womble wrote: My old Kodachrome slides are still pretty damn good (they go back to 1982) but the "Boots" slide films fade. By the way gartmore, don't bin those slides. Our photographer has quite some success scanning old slides and restoring the colour in PS. His biggest success was scanning a set of slides which had been developed accidentally as print films and restoring those to close to what they should be. Cheers, Kris. I wish I'd known how your photographer fixed the cross-processed films. I had a job destroyed by Kodak no less when they put six rolls of Ektachrome through the C41 bath. 'The student done it' was the excuse. They eventually upped their compensation from six rolls to fifty, some of which are still in the freezer, Roscoe. No amount of photoshopping could sort them and this stuff always happens on things you cant re-shoot. On the fridge/freezer front you should remember that all professional film stocks should be kept refridgerated and only amateur films like Kodacolor can survive sitting on shelves in shops. One of the best things about my local Jessops pro shop, that closed before Christmas, was that all the film was correctly stored. Ken "Colour is the fruit salad but black and white is the main meal" Don McCullin
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Posted 15/01/2009 - 15:58
I have some Kodachrome 10 ASA from 1961 and earlier which are all OK. I changed to Agfa CT18 for the higher speed (ASA50) but almost all of them have deteriorated badly and are now magenta and unusable. I also have plenty of Ektachrome from the late 60s onwards (when HS Ektachrome ASA160 came out) and they have survived OK. Ektachrome 64 from mid 70's was a favourite!
![]() Kodachrome 10 ASA, Kodak Retinette IIB with 45 mm lens Pentax K10D, Pentax 300 DA*, Sigma 17-70, Vivitar Ser. 1 105 macro, Sigma 180 macro, Sigma 70-300 APO Last Edited by brownargus on 15/01/2009 - 16:05
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Posted 15/01/2009 - 16:25
10 ASA
Gartmore... I'll ask him next time I see him how he fixed those images. Cheers, Kris. Kris Lockyear 35mm film: too many! Mainly using my LX, along with some others. Horseman LE 5x4 view camera Digital: K10D, K20D DA 12-24mm, 43mm Ltd, SMC-K 200 f/4, SMC-K 135mm f/2.5, SMC-K 50mm f/1.2, SMC-K 15mm f/3.5, SMC-M 100mm f/2.8, Jupiter-9 85mm, Sigma 50mm macro, amongst others.
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Posted 15/01/2009 - 19:36
brownargus wrote: I have some Kodachrome 10 ASA from 1961 and earlier which are all OK. I changed to Agfa CT18 for the higher speed (ASA50) but almost all of them have deteriorated badly and are now magenta and unusable. I also have plenty of Ektachrome from the late 60s onwards (when HS Ektachrome ASA160 came out) and they have survived OK. Ektachrome 64 from mid 70's was a favourite! ![]() Kodachrome 10 ASA, Kodak Retinette IIB with 45 mm lens You expect us to believe that? Own up, these were taken last year at a classic bus rally with your K10 Ken "Colour is the fruit salad but black and white is the main meal" Don McCullin
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Posted 16/01/2009 - 15:39
gartmore wrote: brownargus wrote: I have some Kodachrome 10 ASA from 1961 and earlier which are all OK. I changed to Agfa CT18 for the higher speed (ASA50) but almost all of them have deteriorated badly and are now magenta and unusable. I also have plenty of Ektachrome from the late 60s onwards (when HS Ektachrome ASA160 came out) and they have survived OK. Ektachrome 64 from mid 70's was a favourite! ![]() Kodachrome 10 ASA, Kodak Retinette IIB with 45 mm lens You expect us to believe that? Own up, these were taken last year at a classic bus rally with your K10 Just look at the size of the TV aerial on the building - the old H type about 6 ft tall for Band 1 B&W. Historic stuff!!
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Posted 16/01/2009 - 15:41
womble wrote: 10 ASA Gartmore... I'll ask him next time I see him how he fixed those images. Cheers, Kris. I tried that on a few but the original colour had all but gone and it wasn't possible to get a suitable image. Thanks for the suggestion. John Pentax K10D, Pentax 300 DA*, Sigma 17-70, Vivitar Ser. 1 105 macro, Sigma 180 macro, Sigma 70-300 APO
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Posted 16/01/2009 - 16:33
For correcting colour even "Auto Colour" can work out quite well.
I like the image, by the way. Best regards, John Riley
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Posted 16/01/2009 - 19:44
Brownargus, have you seen this week's AP magazine? There is an article on Kodak retinettes
Ken "Colour is the fruit salad but black and white is the main meal" Don McCullin |
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