tetrisattack
Maximum Creativity!
Okay, so in the Kodachrome thread that's still on the front page somebody pointed out that Kodachrome was designed to be archivally stable for 75 years, while E-6 is understood to be 20-30 years. I've heard this figure bandied around elsewhere, too, probably photo.net, so it seems to be the commonly accepted archival term for slides.
But the other month, I unearthed some mounted slides at work that were just rattling around in a cardboard box. According to the printed labels on the slide mounts, they were shot in May of 1974, apparently on Ektachrome X. A tour of the high school library system! Fascinating stuff! 😉
Even stored as they were, these slides look fine over 31 years later, aside from questionable exposure and the forgiveable tungsten/fluorescent color cast. Blacks are still black, whites are still white, and the contrast still seems about right. So where does that 30 year estimate come from? And would I be safe in assuming that (professionally processed, carefully stored) slides made from current emulsion films will live even longer, perhaps 40 or 50 years?
But the other month, I unearthed some mounted slides at work that were just rattling around in a cardboard box. According to the printed labels on the slide mounts, they were shot in May of 1974, apparently on Ektachrome X. A tour of the high school library system! Fascinating stuff! 😉
Even stored as they were, these slides look fine over 31 years later, aside from questionable exposure and the forgiveable tungsten/fluorescent color cast. Blacks are still black, whites are still white, and the contrast still seems about right. So where does that 30 year estimate come from? And would I be safe in assuming that (professionally processed, carefully stored) slides made from current emulsion films will live even longer, perhaps 40 or 50 years?