Ektachrome 160 from Sep. 1988--Interested in the Results?

Forum covering all aspects of small gauge cinematography! This is the main discussion forum.

Moderator: Andreas Wideroe

Post Reply
tfunch24
Posts: 234
Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 5:38 am
Contact:

Ektachrome 160 from Sep. 1988--Interested in the Results?

Post by tfunch24 »

I bought an old unexposed silent cartridge of Ektachrome 160 film along with a Canon 512XL camera last week. It expired in September 1988, and I doubt it's been stored in a freezer. Since some people here have expressed an interest in the results of shooting films that have expired, I'm willing to post a clip to demonstrate what the ravages of time can do to a cartridge of film.

I'm going to send the cartridge off to Rocky Mountain Film Lab.

Anyone interested?

Tom
mattse03
Posts: 28
Joined: Thu Apr 24, 2003 5:58 pm
Location: Texas
Contact:

Post by mattse03 »

Sure, why not? I don't mind see some expired ektachrome if you are going to upload it.
-Matt
Angus
Senior member
Posts: 3888
Joined: Fri Mar 07, 2003 11:22 am
Contact:

Post by Angus »

A couple of years ago I exposed two E160 cartridges dated 1985 and they came back PERFECT....not any single problem, not even a small amount of fogginge.

E160 is a very stable emulsion. I've got some more E160 sound carts in the freezer :) :)
User avatar
S8 Booster
Posts: 5857
Joined: Mon May 06, 2002 11:49 pm
Real name: Super Octa Booster
Location: Yeah, it IS the real thing not the Fooleywood Crapitfied Wannabe Copy..
Contact:

Post by S8 Booster »

I shot a E160 from 1994 recently: E160 and in my view it came out excellent. I believe this cart had been properly stored.

R
..tnx for reminding me Michael Lehnert.... or Santo or.... cinematography.com super8 - the forum of Rednex, Wannabees and Pretenders...
tfunch24
Posts: 234
Joined: Tue May 28, 2002 5:38 am
Contact:

Post by tfunch24 »

I finished filming on Saturday and mailed the cartridge to RMFL today. It's going to take at least two months for them to develop it--possibly six.

I'm interested in seeing how well they can restore the film.

As for film content, I did not shoot anything special--just myself getting my hair cut, some footage of my cats, a lake at dusk, etc.

Tom
Angus
Senior member
Posts: 3888
Joined: Fri Mar 07, 2003 11:22 am
Contact:

Post by Angus »

If it's from 1988 I would expect it will come back perfect, unless it has at some time been exposed to extreme conditions of heat.

E160 is about the most stable colour film I have ever come across, you can easily add a decade to the expire date...even if you leave it on a shelf in your home and don't refridgerate.
User avatar
vidwerk
Posts: 822
Joined: Wed May 01, 2002 2:20 am
Location: Toronto, CANADA
Contact:

Post by vidwerk »

I recently had 2 carts of 1980 expired k40 developed. The ultra-low contrast images had an extreme pink hue. Very unpleasant. I assume that certain film dyes fade quicker than others to give us this pink hue.
Simon.
Post Reply