<p>My uncles Kodachrome slides have held up the test of time. Other types of slide films not so much. I have been given expired cold stored slide films they do not make anymore. But I always cross process all my slide films. I like the color shifts.</p>
<p>Hey everyone. I am going to be shooting a cold stored, expired roll of 400 black and white film. It expired in 2000. I see the film looks a dark red. I was thinking of shooting it at ISO 50. I wanted to get your opinions on that. Thank you.</p>
<p>I just looked on Freestyle photo's website. The Fuji 1600, X-tra 800 and X-tra 400 are marked new. </p>
<p>http://www.freestylephoto.biz/category/1-Film?page=2</p>
<p>Hello Everyone. I have searched for this but have not found anything online. I was told that Fuji was handing out rolls of the 1600 speed film and I was given a roll. has anyone else heard about this? Thank you.</p>
<p>Well I do not know where you live in the world , but here in the states, slide or negative pro film is close to $10 or more for one roll so it is the same.</p>
<p>Cinestill is a little over $10. So I do not know, where, you can buy three rolls of film for that price, as one person mentioned. Film has gone way up in price especially slide film. One roll is close to $10.</p>
<p>Scala cannot be developed at just any lab. I found that out when I bought a roll into a lab that processes black and white. DR5 does Scala. And I will be sending it there.</p>
<p>Cross processed slide film is always going to be contrasty. You are changing the format. Therefore the prints should reflect that. I always cross process my slide film. I like the color shifts</p>
<p>I love Ektar for it's punchy colors. I used it again, recently, and shot a model in the shade and got some blue skin tones. I am not complaining. I like the unpredictability of film.</p>
<p>It could be the lab. Sometimes my cloud photos come with an unnatural blue look to them. I never had this problem with labs before digital printing/scanning.</p>
<p>I still strive for Artworld domination and still want to be in the Art history books. So whatever art I choose to do, and not just photography, that is going to get me there, then that is the route I am going to take.</p>