edgar_njari Posted February 10, 2005 Share Posted February 10, 2005 Does anyone know what kind of emulsion was used for those Kodak 126 films in the 90's? Was it the same emulsion used in gold films, or was it some other. If not, which generation/technology would that film fit into? p.s. the reason I'm asking is because I've found some old pictures fromt he 126 format and the look is quite different from the usual 90's technology, so I thought, perhapse that film was using some older generation emulsion. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
john_shriver Posted February 10, 2005 Share Posted February 10, 2005 If you have the negatives, can you read the edge lettering, and provide it? Not sure if they ever got past VR or VR-G on 126 film. Although 620 size made it all the way to the Gold generation, I've seen rolls of GA620 and/or GB620. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
edgar_njari Posted February 10, 2005 Author Share Posted February 10, 2005 I don't have the negatives. But I remember the boxes said kodacolor on them, now I remembered. Must be the last generation of consumer Kodacolor before Gold came. But now I found a side on the web wich has all the labels cataloged, and its noted that gold 200 was allso packed in 126 format. So now I really don't know what made the different look. Perhapse the old lenses from the camera. Anyway, the difference that I can point my finger on are sort of like this: the colors look softer, more sublte and "textural", the overexposure is different (softer and pale), the underexposure of skintones looks different (more neutral, not that usual "overbaked" look) And the overall color balance seems more blue-er in prints on a normal sunny day. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve_dunn2 Posted February 10, 2005 Share Posted February 10, 2005 <p>It's probably due to the cheap plastic lens in your Instamatic :-)</p> <p>Slightly more seriously, I used to have an 126 Instamatic when I was a kid; at about the same time, I had a real camera (a <a href="http://www.mirandacamera.com/_modelinfo/modelinfo.htm#Sensomat" target="_blank">Miranda Sensomat RE</a> 35mm SLR). The last time I used 126 was in 1984, and the film edge reads "KODAK SAFETY." The Kodak 35mm film I used just before that, also in 1984, reads "KODAK SAFETY FILM 5035", and the next film I have after that which says Kodak on it was "KODAK CM 400 5079" from 1986. So I probably can't help you much.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
edgar_njari Posted February 10, 2005 Author Share Posted February 10, 2005 Yea, could be the lens Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Gammill Posted February 10, 2005 Share Posted February 10, 2005 I found a roll of 126 Kodacolor in a local drugstore last year. It expired in July 2001. The writing on the box says Kodak Gold, GB126-24. It is an ISO 200 film. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
25asa Posted February 10, 2005 Share Posted February 10, 2005 Yes I bought a roll of Gold 200 126 last year. This was from a corner store that had old film still on the shelf. It was dated 1994 and she sold it to me for full price. Nice aye? They still have one roll left. Regardless I shot with it and it actually turned out with no fog. Granted the shots were horrible being on a cheapy plastic lens Kodak instamatic. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ted_marcus1 Posted February 10, 2005 Share Posted February 10, 2005 Kodak discontinued 126 film in 1999. Before that, it was "Gold" 200, made in Mexico. I've never seen any information about what 35mm film it corresponded to. The only film currently available in 126 is Ferrania Solaris 200. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chris haake Posted February 11, 2005 Share Posted February 11, 2005 Edgar, could it be that the difference you see is from the slightly smaller size of the negative, which will slightly increase grain when enlarged? That, or it's the plastic lens. Just my guess. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray_nieves Posted May 19, 2005 Share Posted May 19, 2005 126 was cut from the same sheet emulsions used for consumer 35 rolls, but instead of perforations on the top and bottom of the film in 35, it only had one running. Kodacolor 100, 200 and 400 were the most common speeds in the later years as most simple 126 cameras were "Indexed" for 80 and 200, later 400 ASA films. I have and still use a Rolleiflex SL26; a great little camera. One can still get Italian Solaris 200 126 film and now one can procure ADOX 200 color film (a copy of Solaris) made in Croatia! If you can find a developer who will do 126, Solaris yields decent color and contrast. While most Instamatics were made for very basic ameture use with cheap, simple lenses, there were some well made, high end 126 cameras with good lenses. 3 SLR with interchangible lenses came from Kodak Instamatic Reflex (made by Zeiss Ikon, I think, with 5 Schneider lenses: 35, 45, 80, 135, 200), a Ricoh with 3 lenses and the best was the Rolleiflex with 3 Zeiss lenses. Some excellent results could be had with these cameras. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
derek_straub Posted July 11, 2006 Share Posted July 11, 2006 I have just loaded my ROLLEI A26 with Solaris 126/24 exp, 200 speed I think, having just learnt that Castle Cameras of Bournemouth England will process 126 Print Film. I do rather love my out of the ordinary Cameras!! When the "square" film is shot, we can then go back to the Nikon 600i with half a roll of Fuji APS slide film left, hoping that it is holding its speed, as its well out of date ( but stored frozen) and been in the Camera 3 hot months. stargazertycho. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now