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Posted 20 hours ago

Kodak 6031330 Professional Ektar 100/36 Colour Negative Film

£9.625£19.25Clearance
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So while I’m not positive that it’s my favorite film, there’s one thing that I can say – I find myself shooting Kodak Ektar 100 most frequently. I heard that February is a gloomy month in France, so I'm leaning more toward embracing the desaturated tones of Portra 400. For a color negative film it has low exposure latitude, meaning it doesn’t do nearly as good with over exposure compared to, for example, Portra 160. Concurrent to this article, I made a video over on the Youtube channel (below) giving my thoughts on this film, including the shots in this article and others.

However, for the general film photographer, I think either Kodak Gold 200, Kodak ColorPlus 200, Kodak Ultramax 400, and even Kodak Portra 400 are better values. It looks great at 400, 200, 100, 50 etc - I've been 5 stops over by mistake and the scans look fine. However, it would be great to have a little more headroom than the 4K standard resolution … I think 6K or 7K would be perfect, but it is what it is. When I came home from my trip to Iceland, I had so many rolls of 120 Velvia to develop that the processing costs were very high.Due to its vivid colours, Ektar film will work very well for nature, travel and outdoor photography.

Kodak - properly known as Kodak Eastman - was founded in America in 1888 and dominated the "Western" world of photography for the next 100 years, constantly in fierce rivalry with the Japanese Fuji. I agree that it really takes a lot of time to fully understand everything about a given type of film, but you have to start somewhere. Again, I didn’t have a the same location, but it is in the same direction with respect to the sun, so I think they can be compared. For a 100 speed film, there are many slower films out there that provide great results for not quite as much money. Especially when you consider I was losing daylight by the time I shot that, hence why I was looking for something to shoot with a wider aperture.It uses Kodak Vision Motion Picture Film Technology to achieve a fine grain and it's perfect for photographers who are looking for quality, even at bigger prints. It performs best when shot at the box speed of ISO 100 and does perform slightly better overexposed than underexposed. The vivid colours that are its strength and that make your landscapes and flowers pop will often make skin tones too red. com/sweet-city-bruges/, there is a mix between Portra and digital files, but I do like the portra shots here very much. I’ve no hard data, of course, but it seems that Ektar is making a comeback and getting the recognition it deserves.

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