Film Photography
C200 and C400 are back as Fujifilm restarts color film production in China
Good news for film photography fans: Fujifilm, the last major color film producer besides Kodak, has announced the restart of production for two popular films:…
We can never really emulate the old “film” look, and here is why
I have been wondering for a long time, “what makes old film photographs so great?”. I’ve studied books filled with Kodachrome images, books of old…
Photographer makes world’s first cannabis-based film developer
You can develop film at home with different homemade concoctions, but Dmitri Tcherbadji really intrigued me. He made a cannabis-based film developer and processed over…
Film photographers rejoice! Kodak Professional Photo Chemicals are back in Europe
In a welcome development for film photographers, Kodak Professional Photo Chemicals are making a comeback across Europe. The original formula chemicals, trusted by photographers for…
Unmask your orange negs – EZ conversion of color negative scans
You know the drill; you’ve got a pile of scanned color negatives. All you need to do is convert them into digital color positives (prints)…
Alternative film developing: The marriage of beer and film
Norwich Camera Company started on a front porch in the historic district of Norwich, CT with a case of PBR (blue ribbon beer) and 3…
It lives! The Dead Film format that won’t die
Relive the 1970s all over again, shoot 110 Format Film forever! No matter how you measure it, 110 format film negatives are tiny. While that…
Photographer shows a simple way to use any film paper with vintage Hasselblad
Italian photographer Ursula Ferrara has shown us some exciting experiments before. She built a 16″ x 20″ camera entirely from scratch, made a lens with…
Digging even deeper into the simulated digital grain rabbit hole
It has been a bit over a year since my first article about film grain. And I thought that that was it and that I’d dug…
Make film developing less tedious with this DIY automated agitator
Developing your own film at home, especially black and white film, isn’t difficult. Don’t get me wrong, it’s still a pain, but it’s not difficult….