Kodak Ektar 25

vladimir

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I just got my hands on a bunch of expired film - some Perutz 100, Koinka 100, some no-name Jessops and so on. But (to me at least) the most interesting one is a roll of Kodak Ektar 25. Yup, 25 :D

It didn't come in a box, so I have no idea when it expired, although I suspect its more than 10yrs old; the seller assured me they were all stored in a cool & dark place (but on Ebay that promise isn't worth much)

I can't wait to put it through my OM-2n and burn through it, but... I'd like to get the best results possible from the Ektar, and I was wondering if anybody here has any advice? I was thinking of shooting it at just under box speed, and obviously on a very sunny day? I haven't shot expired film before, hence the question...

P.S. After a quick search, I've just found out Kodak stopped manufacturing the "classic" Ektar range in 1994. That would make my film more than 20yrs old!

films.jpg
 
Wow its going to be like taking pics while on acid.
 
I shoot a lot of OOD film and almost always shoot it at the box speed, particularly if I don't know how it has been stored. The Ektar will be old, a great film in its time, but old. Indeed I think it was the Romans preferred emulsion:lol::lol::lol:
 
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Haha, thank you! Old indeed, but in its day it had a very good reputation. All I have to do now is wait for that sunny day, as the exposure parameters are quite limited.

I once found a roll of Ektachrome 400 in a kitchen drawer, expired in 1993 or thereabouts - shot it at box speed and had it C41 developed, at ASDA I think. Some frames came out okay, some (the majority) were very dark and all of them were very, very grainy (although I put that down to it being cross processed and because 400 film degrades faster than low ISO numbers).

Here's the most presentable example:

8062701130_66a78e7ab3_b.jpg
 
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