35mm Color Bulk Roll (100 ft) - Kodak LOW ISO Color
Fresh-Dated Kodak LOW ISO 35mm Color Film!
The Film Photography Project is happy to offer 35mm film in convenient hand-rolled 30.5m (100 ft) rolls (on core) - iso 1.6 - Process: C-41
For bulk film loaders that accept 100 ft rolls of film
Usage
Our 100 foot bulk rolls are for personal shooting, not re-selling as single 35mm cartridges. Sales of individual rolls from FPP bulk rolls is prohibited.
Low ISO Color (35mm) is a low-speed duplicating film.It is intended for making digital dupes in motion picture film labs. When using in your 35mm camera to shoot pictorials, this film will produce a film negative.
Standard C-41 Processing! There is no rem jet associated with this film (like other color Vision stocks) and can be self-developed at home (in the FPP ECN-2 Kit). This film can also be commercially processed by The Darkroom and other commercial labs that process C-41 films.
Daylight or Tungsten (Studio Light) Balanced? This film is neither Daylight or Tungsten! The film is designed to be exposed under laser, CRT, and LED light sources. Since this film was not manufactured for in-camera use, colors may be a bit off-beat. See photo examples on this page.
The film seems clear. Is there an anti-halation layer? This film does not appear to have a standard anti-halation layer. It does have an Anti-Static Layer! According to Kodak, "the anti-static layer remains with the film after processing, eliminating the electrostatic attraction of dirt particles to the processed film, even at relatively low humidity. A very thin polymeric backing layer coated on top of the anti-static layer provides improved resistance to back-side scratches, cinch marks, and abrasion of both raw stock and processed film. The backing layer also contains process-surviving lubricant and matte to optimize winding and transport characteristics".
How do I meter for asa 1.6? You must dial the asa manually into your camera or meter. If you camera can't be set to asa 1.6, you can dial in asa 25 then open up 4 more stops
Photo below by Swedish-born, San Francisco-livin' photographer Carl Nenzén Lovén. Here on Flickr here.
Photo below by Kevin Balluff
- Kevin's Flickr photostream can be seen here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/eyetwist
Kevin says: "I 2254 shot with a Nikon F4 and either a 85mm f/1.4 or 50mm f/1.4 lens. I rated the film at ISO 1.5. I'll probably rate it at ISO 1.2 on the next roll. Processing was done in standard C-41 as there is no remjet on the film. I also experimented with cross processing the film in E6, +2 stop push. This is my normal process for C41 to E6 xpro and generally provides satisfactory results. The result was a completely blank film strip - not even any edge numbers or codes. The E6 process completely washed away the emulsion."