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Kodak Film Camera

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Related review

Nate n'Gus 2024-08-14 05:16:19

[828] I used this film in an old kodak brownie camera found in an attic...the film was perfect

5
Mark 2024-05-26 04:25:38

[100] Kodak ektar is my “go to” film

5
Greg the 3D Photographer 2024-09-23 08:24:36

[0.045 lb] I just found an old Kodak Tourist 620 Camera that had been sitting in my closet for years, only to realize that as great as this camera is, I might not be able to find film for it. Well lucky for me, B&H is not too far from me, and when I went there to see if they had 620 film they sure did. The fact that 120 & 620 are the same size helps, and the 620 they sell is just actually 120 film respooled onto a 620 core. I shot 2 rolls of TriX 620 and it came out great. Thanks to B&H, this old camera can now be used again and again.

5
op204 2024-04-21 09:29:38

[Color Negative] Bankruptcy or no bankruptcy, Kodak still makes great film!

5
William 2024-04-03 03:44:42

[Acetate] I used Kodak Tri X 120 roll film in a Yashica Mat 124G twin lens camera in my first college photography class in 1973. I just bought a roll to use in my Nikon FM2, still an older camera comparatively, and expect to get the same superb images with this roll today as I did back then. I have always loved Tri X.

5
Zachary 2024-05-06 02:54:41

[C-41] I use this in my old Kodak Duaflex ii fake-TLR camera. It works great being a color ISO film of 100, colors stay sharp and the grain seems fine. I have a fixed shutter speed of 1/30 sec so the 100 ISO is important to me. Really enjoyed this film.

5
Robert 2024-06-09 09:30:55

[0.045 lb] My roots in photography go back to 35mm B&W Tri X. I am very happy to find Kodak and B&H still supply this great film. I use this in my dad's 1962 Kodak Duaflex IV camera and am thrilled to see the wonderful results. The film has great exposure latitude to make up for the age of the camera and the grain - love grain in my B&W film. Helps to give that classic film look. Great for art photography.

5
Jonathan 2024-06-14 04:20:54

[4.7 lb] I shoot this film and the results are always fantastic. Unfortunately, Kodak jacked up the price about $11.00 in an instant recently. Making this film much less appealing for 3 mins 20 sec of film at 18fps. I was the reviewer who pointed out that Kodak's Denmark-made (They hid that info), expensive camera was just to lead everyone on including their financial backers after Chapter 11 by the CEO. He left w/his golden umbrella. Nice job sinking Kodak deeper into debt & some like what he, well, didn't do as promised? No camera of course. Being actually a chemical company mainly, they managed to finally put out the Ektachrome, also way overpriced. The cartridges are thinner, cheaper but do operate okay I noticed, since I process. They could have manufactured a low priced S-8 camera with the film. Kodak has zero imagination, which is why they went belly-up and are now millions in debt. In all successful businesses it involves both GIVE and take. Both. Kodak is greedy and clueless. This time the banks and their debtors will not bail Kodak out. Fuji or?, should take over the movie film business. A large number of new buyers would be instantly attracted to this format, if Kodak or hopefully another company, sees the opportunity & knows how to sell. It's not that film is dead, it's Kodak is out of touch. Again a great reversal, worth realistically $19.95. Sell a cam for say $200.00 & film in a package and people will buy. That's how you win in business. LOWER these incredibly high prices & add a camera. I do not mean the over-priced Canon with stickers sold by another business on the West Coast. A nice, new, inexpensive camera, lower film prices, sales jump. Stay the course and Kodak's flimsy existence will be liquidated, as they are in the process of doing. They now exist only in name. In fact, that's their few sources of revenue: Loaning out their name. No vision. There is a big market for super 8 if another company takes over. B+H is the place to buy.

5
Chris the Tubist 2024-07-21 09:29:18

[Color Negative] I recently purchased an old Kodak camera at a flea market. I assumed it would take 120 film, but to my surprise, when I opened it up, I saw a large label that stated KODAK 620 FILM ONLY. DO NOT USE 120. While I do know that it's possible to use 120 film in it, it was still missing the spool that I needed. I didn't have to search the web long before I found B&H and realised that they sell 620 film. I was very pleased by the quality, pricing, and even delivery time of my product.

5
B&W Bob 2024-08-09 04:30:50

[Acetate] It's Tri-X B&W film, one of the greatest films of all time. Used it in my dad's old Kodak camera and the negs were great - good tonal range, sharp focus, medium grain.

5