SolaresLarrave
My M5s need red dots!
The Kodachrome part of this is simply marketing... the images are interesting without the mention of the film type.
olifaunt
Well-known
The Kodachrome part of this is simply marketing... the images are interesting without the mention of the film type.
I doubt that, since Kodachrome doesn't exist anymore. The images have that characteristic Kodachrome look of a certain decade (there were various KCs) that is simply transcendent, at least to my eyes. I have never seen anyone reproduce that look successfully any other way, especially not digitally (and many have tried).
charjohncarter
Veteran
That is a weird collection of photos. I'll bet that if you saw them projected there would be a lot more Kodachrome there. Good stuff though.
Bob Michaels
nobody special
If one is specifically interested in Kodachrome images, simply look at any National Geographic prior to 2009 when Kodak quit making Kodachrome. They used it almost exclusively. BTW, there have been some pretty good photos in National Geographic over the years.
My dermatologist, actually a very good photographer, has a collection of old National Geographics from the mid 50's to around 10 years ago in his waiting room. Best reading material of any of my doctors.
My dermatologist, actually a very good photographer, has a collection of old National Geographics from the mid 50's to around 10 years ago in his waiting room. Best reading material of any of my doctors.
I doubt that, since Kodachrome doesn't exist anymore.
That`s exactly why people are nostalgic for it.
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