620 Basic Film - FPP Brownie BW (1 Roll)
FPP BASIC 620 BW FILM* / BW Negative / 100 iso / 1-roll
This BW panchromatic film is perfect for your Brownie or other "box type" 620 camera. Get out your 620 film camera and start shooting!
*The 620 Film Spool - Our 620 Film is hand-rolled onto a new FPP mold-injected plastic, re-usable 620 film spool. Our FPP 620 Spool is mold injected and is just a fraction thicker than vintage metal spools due to the fabrication requirements. Our spool will be snug in 1% of 620 cameras. It will loosen with repeated use (if you re-use your spool or can be easily sanded down with a piece of sandpaper.) This product is sold without warranty. All sales are final. Due to the age of vintage cameras your results are not guaranteed.
How many shots per roll? 620 film (like 120 film) has numbers imprinted on the backing paper. Number of exposures ( 8, 12 or 16) determined by what type of camera you have. Please consult your camera manual as to how many exposures you will get per roll as well as how to load film. Don’t have a camera manual? Visit Butkus Camera Manuals. Mike offers most camera manuals for 620 cameras.
Light leaks - Vintage camera the age of 620 cameras are prone to light leaks. Best to tape up the seams around the film compartment with light tight tape. Light leaks can also occur if your camera does not wind the film tightly onto your take-up spool. This is known as a "Fat Roll". Also, when handling your film - always store your exposed film in its black bag or snap case.
Developing Info:
You can process yourself or send it out to our fav lab TheDarkroom.com!
- Kodak D76 - Stock Solution / 68° Fahrenheit / 6-7 min
- Kodak D76 - 1+1 / 68° Fahrenheit / 10 min
- FPP D96 - Stock solution / 68° Fahrenheit / 7 minutes
- Kodak HC-110 - Dilution B / 68° Fahrenheit / 6 minutes or Dilution H (1+63) for 12 minutes
- Kodak X-Tol - Stock solution / 68° Fahrenheit / 5-6 minutes
- Kodak Xtol 1+1 / 68° Fahrenheit / 8 minutes
- Sprint Standard - Dilution 1-9 / 8.5 minutes / 68° Fahrenheit
- Rodinal / PyroCat - Download Chart HERE (WeTransfer Link)
If you are using ILFORD chemistry, you can find the Kodak name by using this chart - Iford uses Kodak formulas. Find the Kodak name and use the info above.