Exposing expired slide film

abdoujaparov

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Keith
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I was given some expired film a while back. I've shot the B&W, won't bother with the C41 until the world's stock of AGFA Vista has run out, but still left are Velvia 100F (expired 2005), Sensia 100 (expired 2005 - processed paid!) and Elite Chrome 400 (expired god-knows when, but let's assume 2005 too). It hasn't been chilled or frozen, but as far as I know hasn't been stored on a radiator, either.

Any tips for exposing it - to be processed as E6, not cross-processed. I know the results are going to be unpredictable, but I fancy giving it a go anyway.
 
Just add a stop to your exposure times, should be fine :thumbs:
 
I've been wondering about this too as I may shoot some of the stock of Velvia I acquired that expired in 1992. I guess I'll need to add two or three stops to that...and can probably expect some colour shift?
 
Probably, but unless you're projecting it you can all ways fix it in post.
 
The slides would be scanned in the short term, but I'd also like to make prints from them in the longer term. I guess that's also 'post' :)
 
The slides would be scanned in the short term, but I'd also like to make prints from them in the longer term. I guess that's also 'post' :)

You can't optically print directly from slides anymore as cibachrome/ilfochrome is no longer manufactured, so your only printing option is from the scans anyway, unless you want to produce some internegatives using C41 film.
 
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You can't optically print directly from slides anymore as cibachrome/ilfochrome is no longer manufactured, so your only printing option is from the scans anyway, unless you want to produce some internegatives using C41 film.

Good to know before I go off and shoot a ton! Anyone want to buy some slide film?! LOL
 
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