Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/07/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mr. Wouk expresses an accurate account of film life. Kodachromes and black and white are the only films that last. All others, as far as I can tell from reading, deteriorate and fade in a matter of years, not centuries. A good rule of thumb seems to be 20-40 years. Much depends on storage. You want dark, cool, dry storage to increase life. Freezing may work, but intruduces other problems. So, what to do. This does not seem to me to be a reason for avoiding Ektachromes. It does tend to focus attention on recent advances in film technology and the need to compare. Kodak says the new films last longer than the original Ektachromes. Other companies say the same or refuse to say anything. Anyone shooting Agfa or Ansco films in the 1950s or 60s knows they are long gone and worthless. Would you be willing to give up storage life for better color. Most professisonals do, which is a major reason why the E-6 process exists (that and the ability to process it yourself or have a small lab do it). Everyone has known since the 1930s that Kodachromes are the only color films that last. Having to have a huge lab process the film in only a few sites around the world and having to deal with some color problems are the reasons most photographers use E-6 films. And what of color negatives???? They present yet another problem. Apparently they fade faster than anything else. How do you feel about seeing your family history fade away? Think that is annoying or wrong? Then consider what happened when the movie industry switched from the massive, expensive, cumbersome, but superb original Technicolor process that uses 3 simultaneous b/w films passing through a gigantic camera. You got gorgeous color on all the original color classics from GONE WITH THE WIND, WIZARD OF OZ, etc through the 40s musicals and into the 1950s, when color negative was introduced with THE ROBE. Every multi-million dollar movie made since has been shot on color negative. And people and companies with billions of dollars invested in libraries see them falling apart. A recent $20-30 million restoration project was undertaken to bring MY FAIR LADY back to its original condition, and it is not that old a film. So, some of the good folks got together to jointly sue Kodak for selling them film that does not last. They say they would never have switched or made films with color negative if they had known the process was so unstable. And we think we have problems....... Fred Ward