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  1. Vor 2 Tagen · Our Top 3 Choices for The Best Camera Film. Kodak Gold. Buy from Amazon.com. Fujifilm 200 35mm. Buy from Amazon.com. Kodak Portra 400 35mm. Buy from Amazon.com. Shooting with the best camera film will ignite your passion for film photography. Analog photography is back from the brink and experiencing another boom period.

  2. 7. Feb. 2023 · The film is 6 centimeters wide and comes in 6×4.5, 6×6, 6×7, and panoramic 6×13. Whereas 35mm film comes in a convenient cartridge that’s pretty easy to load into your camera, 120 film comes ...

  3. Der klassische Color-600-Film kommt mit weißen, beschreibbarem Rand. Alternativ gibt es Editionen mit verschiedenfarbigem Rand. Vergleichsweise neu ist die Round-Frame-Editionmit weißem rundem Rahmen, der dem Foto eine ganz andere Wirkung verleiht.

  4. 2. Lomography Color 400. For those vintage, old-school captures, Lomography Color 400 is the best 35mm film stock. The combination of high contrast, vivid colors, and grain doesn’t try to replicate the real-world scene, but rather brings out interesting features you may have not noticed before. Buy at B&H ($45) 3.

  5. I’m returning to 35mm film photography after a 30 year + hiatus, and would like to know what film(s) you’d recommend to a “second-time newbie”, both B&W and color. (I miss Kodachrome). I am also planning to get some B&W contrast filters and would love to see your recommendations for them, as well UV/haze filters for color photography. My Minolta lenses all have 55mm thread diameters ...

  6. 8. Juni 2018 · When I shoot color negative film, I generally overexpose it by 1-2 stops. There are several ways of doing that–one way, as you mentioned, is by rating your film at a slower speed. Color negative film can handle overexposure quite well–some up to 3-4 stops. Generally, there is no need to tell the lab that you overexposed your film. The only ...

  7. 29. Aug. 2023 · Colorplus 200 is arguably the oldest color film offered by Kodak, descending from a line of films called “Kodacolor” that was released in the 1970s. Kodacolor was offered in a variety of sizes and film speeds. One particular version from the 1980s called “Kodacolor VR 200” would later be repackaged and sold as Kodak ColorPlus 200.