ISO/ASA 1.6 (that's one point six) speed film? Huh?

I used to shoot high contrast black & white copy film for its high resolution. I wonder if this color copy film has high resolution.
 
I used to shoot high contrast black & white copy film for its high resolution. I wonder if this color copy film has high resolution.

Decades ago when I was in college, some classmates used to shoot the Kodak copy film at something like ASA/ISO 8 or so and then underdevelop it. It would do 8x10 B&W prints that had the look and feel of being done with a 4x5 negative, but of course a lot of light was required.

I was trying to think back, and the lowest box speed I can remember was the original Kodachrome at 10, and I never really saw let alone used it, as the Kodachrome 25 was phased in by the time I got into this stuff.
 
Just checked the ISO/ASA scale on a couple of light meters

Gossen Luna-Pro ASA: 0.8 to 25000
Sekonic L-758D ISO: 3 to 8000

It's just the scale, but the Gossen kind of surprised me...
 
I shoot wetplate, which is about ISO 1-8, depending. An outdoor exposure with a fast lens will typically be 2 seconds in sun, 10 in open shade. It's doable, but you need a tripod.
 
That is Kodak Vision Digital Intermediate Film. Cine film transfer recorders are bright (three-beam laser or a CRT projected down to a 12x24mm or smaller image), hence the low speed.
 
p.s. what's the grain like with this film?


Yes, it's hard to tell from those examples, but it would be interesting to know. To me such low iso offers no additional benefits (I can live with iso 25 and ND filters - if needed) unless it also offers extremely fine grain...
 
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