P. Lynn Miller
Well-known
I was rummaging through a cabinet at the uni and found 3 rolls of Kodachrome 200 which I was allowed to claim.
Expiry dates... 8/99, 12/2001, 4/2006... these would have been stored at ambient temperature in a lab, so no freezer or refrigeration.
Is worth cost and effort to expose these? And if so, what speed should I rate the film?
Hoping someone here with more experience shooting expired Kodachrome will be able to give some advice.
Thanks!
Expiry dates... 8/99, 12/2001, 4/2006... these would have been stored at ambient temperature in a lab, so no freezer or refrigeration.
Is worth cost and effort to expose these? And if so, what speed should I rate the film?
Hoping someone here with more experience shooting expired Kodachrome will be able to give some advice.
Thanks!
Luna
Well-known
No, not worth the cost. Trade/sell them for some 64 or 25. Just my 2 cents.Is worth cost and effort to expose these? And if so, what speed should I rate the film?
Mark Wood
Well-known
Perfect for cross processing. Since it is so far out of date, you'll get some cool colors.
Err, no good for cross-processing unfortunately. Kodachrome doesn't have colour dye couplers built into the emulsion layers like modern C41/E6 films, so the only real chance of getting any image from it other than using the proper process is to develop it as black and white (which can be done commercially for ancient Kodachrome - http://processc22.webs.com/Newinfosheet.pdf)
wpb
Well-known
I shoot all my way-out-of-date color film at night. In this case, the processing cost may be the fly in the ointment.
35mmdelux
Veni, vidi, vici
shoot it as rated. nothing to lose since you got it for free..
not_in_good_order
Well-known
I'd only bother with the one that expired in 2006. Even then, it will likely have quite a magenta cast.
excellent
Well-known
Shoot it. See what happens. Could be interesting.
bob338
Well-known
count on a little loss in contrast. that's the only problem i've encountered with expired kodachrome.
LeicaTom
Watch that step!
You can't crossprocess Kodachrome........in C-41 it just strips off the chemicals and you get a clear roll of film, also messes up the C-41 chemicals ~ nasty!
Tom
Tom
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