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3 year old film stock still good?


Eugene Lehnert

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I shot with a 3 year old roll of Kodak film this weekend. It's been sitting in my refrigerator since I won it from Kodak a few years ago. The film was color with a film speed of 320 ASA, the stock was 7277. Any advice on processing this film? Should we push it a stop or maybe we should have overexposed the film a bit?

 

Thanks!

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I shot with a 3 year old roll of Kodak film this weekend. It's been sitting in my refrigerator since I won it from Kodak a few years ago. The film was color with a film speed of 320 ASA, the stock was 7277. Any advice on processing this film? Should we push it a stop or maybe we should have overexposed the film a bit?

 

Thanks!

 

Hi,

 

I would rate it between 160-200 ASA. If its for a telecine finish it should be fine. If you need to print then send a short piece to your lab for evaluation. They will almost certanly tell you its no good!

 

Good luck,

 

Stephen

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We will be doing a video transfer only most likely. I doubt we will ever make a print, but it maybe possible.

 

Why is the transfer better than making a print? If I rated the film at 320 ASA when I shot with it will pushing it help us at all? Pushing it a stop maybe?

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We will be doing a video transfer only most likely. I doubt we will ever make a print, but it maybe possible.

 

Why is the transfer better than making a print? If I rated the film at 320 ASA when I shot with it will pushing it help us at all? Pushing it a stop maybe?

 

Hi,

 

Telecine is more flexable. It may not be possible to get a good print from old stock. I would not advise Push 1 stop with old film, the fog level is high enough already!

 

Stephen

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I shot with a 3 year old roll of Kodak film this weekend. It's been sitting in my refrigerator since I won it from Kodak a few years ago. The film was color with a film speed of 320 ASA, the stock was 7277. Any advice on processing this film? Should we push it a stop or maybe we should have overexposed the film a bit?

 

Thanks!

 

If the film has been refrigerated the entire time, it likely has very slight fog increase from ambient radiation. If you gave it normal exposure (usually a bit of overexposure is a good idea with old color negative film), I would still process NORMALLY. With old film that may have increased fog level, a push process is usually not helpful, and will tend to accentuate any increase in grain and fog level from old age.

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