Plenty of people have attempted to mimic the Kodachrome look with their digital images. Even if you can find an old roll of the film, there are no labs in the world that will develop it. It was a good general use film that produced sharp images and pleasing colors. I personally have shot plenty of Kodachrome, mostly Kodachrome 64. This generation of Kodachrome is what most people think of when they picture (pun intended) the film, gracing the pages of magazines like National Geographic. The biggest change was going from the K-12 to the K-14 development process (which was a little less complex, but still complex). The differences between this version and the previous weren’t huge and image quality was nearly identical.
ALIEN SKIN EXPOSURE X 4 FUJI XTRANS ISO
A year later Kodachrome-X was introduced, which had an ISO of 64.Īnother generation of Kodachrome, which came out in 1974, saw Kodachrome II replaced by Kodachrome 25 and Kodachrome-X replaced by Kodachrome 64. While it was still similar to the previous Kodachrome, it was better in pretty much every way. This film boasted more accurate colors, sharper images, finer grain, and a faster ISO of 25.
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Kodak made significant improvements to Kodachrome, and in 1961 released Kodachrome II. Kodak Transparencies – South Weber, UT – Fujifilm X-E1 The December 1946 issue of Arizona Highways, which was the first all-color magazine in the world, featured Barry Goldwater’s Kodachrome images. It became the standard film for color photography for a couple decades, and was even Ansel Adams’ preferred choice for color work. This Kodachrome was the first color film that produced reasonably accurate colors and was the first commercially successful color film. In 1935 Kodak released its next Kodachrome, which was a color transparency film with an ISO of 10. Like all other color photography methods of its time, the results weren’t particularly good and the product not especially successful. The first Kodachrome product was a two-glass-plate color negative that was introduced in 1915. The Kodachrome name has been used for many different films over the years. Kodak produced Kodachrome film from 1935 through 2009, when it was suddenly discontinued. It was legendary, and many people saw the world through its colors. Kodachrome is probably the most iconic photographic film ever made.
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Kodachrome They give us those nice bright colors They give us the greens of summer Makes you think all the world’s a sunny day Kodak Colors – South Weber, UT – Fujifilm X100F “Vintage Kodachrome”