I just found two rolls of 35 mm film with a develop before 06/2000 date on them. They're still sealed as when bought. Are they any good?
It all hinges on where they were stored. Room temp I would say forget it . Freezer is a possibility that you could have decent images for print making.
Room temp. But maybe I'll try them and experiment.
Good luck....try out to make abstracts. It's amazing what you can do when you cancel the rules in processing.
What do you mean when you say abstracts?
hunterroyal49 wrote:
I just found two rolls of 35 mm film with a develop before 06/2000 date on them. They're still sealed as when bought. Are they any good?
Forget about using them. They are 17 years old. And I wouldn't waste money processing them. I found 4 rolls of Kodak Gold ISO 200, that expired in 2004. Even under refrigeration, I wouldn't chance it. They will not have the same freshness and quality as when New. SD cards are so much better. IMO. I have one Lexar 4gb SD card dating back to 2009. It still works just fine. And it doesn't need refrigeration either.
hunterroyal49 wrote:
I just found two rolls of 35 mm film with a develop before 06/2000 date on them. They're still sealed as when bought. Are they any good?
50/50 try it you might like it.
hunterroyal49 wrote:
I just found two rolls of 35 mm film with a develop before 06/2000 date on them. They're still sealed as when bought. Are they any good?
I've used old - discovered - film many times. Give it a try and let us know how it turns out.
turp77
Loc: Connecticut, Plainfield
hunterroyal49 wrote:
I just found two rolls of 35 mm film with a develop before 06/2000 date on them. They're still sealed as when bought. Are they any good?
Go for it! If you don’t shoot them then they are automatically bad. I’ve shot older that wasn’t stowed in a refrigerator and came out fine. I wouldn’t shoot a wedding with them just go out and have fun.
BebuLamar wrote:
I wouldn't use them!
Where is your sense of adventure?
Manglesphoto wrote:
Where is your sense of adventure?
"For of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: 'It might have been!'"
-John Greenleaf Whittier
What type of film is it? Color or B&W? What ISO is it?
Manglesphoto wrote:
Where is your sense of adventure?
The 2 rolls of film are not worth that much money why use them? It's not an adventure. I would develop a very old roll of film that already been exposed but not using expired unexposed film. I am not into lomography.
The film is ISO 400 And color. I found an article that said to drop the ISO setting one stop per decade old. I'll try it.
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