relyt
Member
Carey M
Established
400 speed color negative film I would overexpose two stops, maybe three. That Ektachrome I’d probably shoot at box speed or maybe half-stop over, depending on the scene.
charjohncarter
Veteran
I had some poorly stored C-41 from 2002 I overexposed by one stop. It was fine when developed. Maybe a little color shift, but with scanning and color correction software all in all they came out great.
Kodak Max 400
Kodak Max 400 expired 2002 mostly rainy days by John Carter, on Flickr
Expired (2002) Kodak Max 400 by John Carter, on Flickr
expired Kodak MAX 411 by John Carter, on Flickr
Kodak Max 400



relyt
Member
400 speed color negative film I would overexpose two stops, maybe three. That Ektachrome I’d probably shoot at box speed or maybe half-stop over, depending on the scene.
Thank you, very much appreciated.
I had some poorly stored C-41 from 2002 I overexposed by one stop. It was fne when developed. Maybe a little color shift, but with scanning and color correction software all in all they came out great.
These look great! thanks for the advice.
Huss
Veteran
I just received 4 rolls of expired film.Looks to be from around the early 2000's. Not sure how it was stored. Any advice on how to shoot these for best results? Thanks.
View attachment 106691
The tough part is how it was stored - basically was it stored in a hot environment? But as you don't know, you don't know what to adjust for.
So just shoot it at box or 1/2 to 1 stop more. The recommendation to shoot at 2 or 3 stops higher is way off.
I shoot expired film all the time, this roll expired sometime in the 2000's. I rated it at 125 for a 160 film:
Rolleiflex MX 3.5 EVS, Fuji NPS 160 Pro.
D750 scan.

ColSebastianMoran
( IRL Richard Karash )
I suspect a little post-processing helps a lot to make old color film turn out well.
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