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List of discontinued photographic films
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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All the still camera films on this page have either been discontinued, have been updated or the company making the film no longer exists. Often films will be updated and older versions discontinued without any change in the name. Films are listed by brand name.
Photographic films for still cameras that are currently available are in the list of photographic films. Films for movie making are included in the list of motion picture film stocks.
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ADOX
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Adox was a German camera and film brand of Fotowerke Dr. C. Schleussner GmbH of Frankfurt am Main, the world's first photographic materials manufacturer. In the 1950s it launched its revolutionary thin layer sharp black and white KB 14 and 17 films, referred to by US distributors as the 'German wonder film'.[1] In the 1970s Dupont the new owners of the ADOX brand sold the recipes and machinery of the film (but not the brand name) to Fotokemika from Yugoslavia who continued to produce the films according to the 1950s ADOX formulas under the Efke brand.
Black and white film
Colour reversal (slide) film
Colour negative film
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ADOX (Fotoimpex)
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The current rights to the ADOX name for photographic products were obtained in 2003 by Fotoimpex of Berlin, Germany, a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from former eastern Europe. This included the Efke films from Fotokemika which were sold branded as 'ADOX CHS Art' re-uniting the ADOX name with the original Schleussner film formula. Fotoimpex established the ADOX Fotowerke GmbH film factory in Bad Saarow outside Berlin to convert and package their films, papers and chemicals. After the closure of Fotokemika in 2012, ADOX subsequently revived the KB100 film as ADOX CHS II.
Black and white negative film
Black and white reversal (slide) film
Colour negative film
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Agfa
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Originally founded in Berlin, 1867, this company became known as Agfa (Actien-Gesellschaft für Anilin-Fabrikation) in 1873. The Wolfen factory was established in 1910 and the original Leverkusen works around the same time. By 1925 under IG Farben, the Wolfen plant was specializing in film production and the Leverkusen plant photographic paper. After the war, Agfa was split into two companies: Agfa AG in Leverkusen, West Germany, and VEB Film- und Chemiefaserwerk Agfa Wolfen in East Germany. Initially both companies produced film under the Agfa brand with the same names, such as Isopan F. To distinguish them, the film edge markings were L IF for Agfa Leverkusen, and W IF for Agfa Wolfen. After 1964 films from Wolfen were rebranded ORWO (ORiginal WOlfen). (See separate listing). Trading of materials however continued between plants.
Agfa AG (Leverkusen), which saw major investment post war in 1952 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Bayer, subsequently merged with Gevaert based in Mortsel, Belgium, in 1964 to form Agfa-Gevaert with Bayer subsequently acquiring full ownership of the merged company. Agfa-Gevaert film products continued to be sold under the Agfa 'rhombus' brand. The Mortsel plant specialized in commercial film, including aerial photography film, and Leverkusen in consumer film. Following a public flotation in 1999, Agfa-Gevaert Group became independent from Bayer. The consumer film division was spun off into a new company AgfaPhoto in 2004 in a management buyout, a time of significant challenges to the traditional film market with the rapid rise of digital photography, resulting in bankruptcy in 7 months, and the closure of the Leverkusen plant in 2005. Production of aerial film continued at the plant in Mortsel, some of which have been subsequently converted for retail sale by Maco Photo Products.
Black and white film
Black and white reversal (slide) films
Color negative films
Color reversal (slide) film
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AGFA PHOTO
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The AGFA consumer film division with its plant in Leverkusen, Germany was spun off by Agfa-Gevaert into a new company AGFA PHOTO in 2004. At buy out the firm was split into a holding company Agfa-Photo Holding GMBH (licenses) and manufacturing company Agfa-Photo GMBH (leverkusen). The manufacturing company went bankrupt in 7 months resulting in the closure of the Leverkusen plant in 2005. The holding company was unaffected and retains a trademark license from Agfa-Gevaert for the use of the AgfaPhoto brand and 'red dot' logo on products having a photographic application.[21] Since 2005 these rights for consumer film products have been sub-licensed to Lupus Imaging & Media.[22] After 2005 the colour films were initially made by Ferrania while black and white films continued to be AGFA material converted by Ferrania from cold stored master rolls of AGFA APX. Ferrania itself closed in 2009 and so Lupus procured replacement Agfa Photo branded films from Fujifilm (colour) and Harman/Ilford (black and white). The contract with Fujifilm ended in early 2018[23] ending the sale of colour film under the AgfaPhoto brand.[24]
Black and white film
Colour negative film
Colour reversal (slide) films
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Azomureș
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Azomureș or AZO, produced by Târgu-Mureș Nitrogenous Fertilizer Plant, was the photographic brand of Romania since the 1981. The photosensitive materials plant in Târgu Mureș, a city in northern Romania, covering an area of about 7 hectares. The plant produced black and white and color photographic paper and films for general photography, industrial and medical use and black and white and color cinematographic films. Film production ended in 2003.
The plant was designed by Japan's Fujitsu to withstand a 9.4 degree earthquake on the Richter scale, consequently due to high cost of demolition the company decided to use the buildings to host cultural events and the photosensitive materials plant was re-opened for this purpose in May 2016.[31]
Black and white film
Colour negative film
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Dan-Di film
Was a film manufactured in Belgium.
Dan-Di Orthochromatic safety film
- Type: Safety Film – Orthochromatic
- Available formats: 116 N-16(known)
- Speed: Rating of High Speed (?) on box EM-N°
- Granularity:
- Latitude:
- Resolving Power:
- History:
- Primary Usage:
dekopan
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VEB Fotochemische Werke Berlin produced films under the brand "dekopan". DEKO stands for DEutsche KOdak. Originally a Kodak subsidiary in Germany. After the founding of German Democratic Republic, the Kodak AG was nationalised and used Kodak branding until 1956 when it was renamed to VEB Fotochemische Werke Berlin. The factory became a part of VEB Fotochemisches Kombinat Wolfen in 1970 and ceased production of photographic films.[32]
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efke
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efke was a brand of (mainly, but not limited to) black and white films and photographic paper produced by Fotokemika Zagreb d.d based in Samobor (near Zagreb), Croatia (former Yugoslavia). Fotokemika d.d acquired the rights to the ADOX film recipes and the production machinery from owners Dupont in the 1970s. As Dupont retained the ADOX brand name, Fotokemika sold the films under the efke brand and continued to manufacture them according to the original 1950s film formulas. The films were also sold by Fotoimpex (Berlin, Germany) under the original ADOX brand name after they acquired the rights to this in 2003. After Fotokemika's closure in 2012, ADOX (Fotoimpex) subsequently revived the KB100 film as ADOX CHS II.
Furthermore Fotokemika had a short lived line of color films[14] and color reversal films called "efkecolor" and "efkechrome" in the 1980s.
Both lines were discontinued in the 1990s for unknown reasons, presumably due to supply shortages and infrastructural damage as a result of the Yugoslav Wars.

Color negative film
Color reversal film
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Eisenberger
Eisenberger Trockenplattenfabrik Otto Kirschten was a German manufacturer of dry plates. Eisenberger Trockenplattenfabrik
ERA
ERA's factory was originally founded in 1950 in Shantou, China. It was named Shantou ERA Limited Corporation (ERA) in 1999. Its main products were black and white film, resin coated papers and x-ray film. Kodak China acquired an 80% share of their assets in 1998 and reputedly invested in a color film line. Production of film emulsion seem to have ended, c2008.[40]
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Ferrania
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Ferrania was an Italian filmmaker based in Ferrania (Liguria), Italy founded in 1923 as a maker of photographic film, papers, and photographic equipment, including cameras. The company was purchased in 1964 by the 3M corporation (US) to become Ferrania 3M and made photographic film sold under the 'Scotch' brand. The films and data storage division was spun off from 3M in 1996 becoming Imation. In 1999, Ferrania was acquired by Schroder Ventures and subsequently sold on to Gruppo Messina (Ignazio Messina & Co. S.p.A.) in 2000, as Ferrania Imaging Technology with film being sold again under the Ferrania brand. However photographic film manufacture ended in 2009. Whilst originally a producer of B&W cine/still films such as P30, as Ferrania 3M it became a significant producer of 'white label' consumer colour films for both retailers and traditional B&W film producers needing a colour film to repackage under their own brand. Examples include; Fortecolor film (also supplied by Konica), the Boots UK pharmacy chain color negative products from ca. 1973 until 2003 and AgfaPhoto color negative and slide films from 2005 until plant closure in 2009 (for Lupus Imaging). Ferrania Technology continues to produce chemicals for medical use and solar panels on part of the original factory complex whilst the film plant was demolished. In 2013 a new company was founded as FILM Ferrania to build a film manufacturing company using the former Ferrania Research laboratory building, its coating machine and other equipment salvaged from the original Ferrania production plant prior to its demolition.
Black and white film
- P24 ISO 20.
- P30 ISO 80. 135, 120, 127. Introduced in 1960 in three versions: Cinema, Leica and Portrait.
- P33 ISO 160. 135, 120, 127, 116
- P36 ISO 320. 120
- P.3 17/10 DIN. 135
- U.2 18/10 DIN. 135
Color negative film
- Ferraniacolor N27, universal colour balance, ISO 40
- Ferraniacolor NM64, masked color negative film, ISO 64
- Ferrania Solaris From early 2000 by Ferrania Imaging Technologies. It was also sold under different names of imported supermarket chains and under the name of several companies such as Polaroid, Samung and others
- Ferrania Solaris FG 100 135 (2000–2003)
- Ferrania Solaris FG 200 135, APS 110, 12 (2000–2003)
- Ferrania Solaris FG 400 135, APS (2000–2003)
- Ferrania Solaris FG 800 135 (2000–2003)
- Ferrania Solaris FG 100 Plus 135 (2003–2009)
- Ferrania Solaris FG 200 Plus 135, APS (2003–2009) (also 110, 126 to 2007)
- Ferrania Solaris FG 400 Plus 135 (2003–2009) FG 400i to c2005?
- Ferrania Solaris FG 800 Plus 135 (2003–2009) FG 800i to c2005?
Color reversal film
- Ferraniacolor 135, 120, photographic plate. Introduced in 1947 until the 1970s. it was available in sizes 135, 120, photographic plate
- Ferraniacolor Dia 28, for daylight, ISO 50
- Ferrania CR 50 for daylight, ISO 50
- Ferrania CR 50 A for artificial light, ISO 50
- Scotch Chrome ISO 100, 400, 1000. 135
- Imation Chrome ISO 100, 400. 135
- Ferrania Solaris Chrome 100 [135]. 2000–2005
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FILM Ferrania
FILM Ferrania s.r.l. is a photographic film manufacturing company located in Ferrania (Liguria), Italy. Following closure of the original Ferrania factory in 2009 the company was re-founded in 2013 on a small part of the original site to build a new film manufacturing base using the former Ferrania research laboratory (L.R.F.) and its narrow coater. FILM Ferrania commenced manufacturing a black and white still film in February 2017 based on P30, a classic 1960s motion picture film stock.
Film Photography Project
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Established in 2009 by Michael Raso, Film Photography Project (FPP) sources a variety of still films including those originally made for technical, motion pictures, industrial or aerial applications for creative purposes. Therefore, films are often available for a limited period.
Black and white films
Color negative films
Color reversal (slide) films
Film Washi
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Factory in Saint-Nazaire, France. Film Washi launched in 2013, producing a handcrafted film, handcoated on traditional Washi paper. Also converting other films industrially coated in larger factories and originally made for technical, motion pictures, industrial or aerial applications.
Black and white films
Forte
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Forte (Forte Photochemical Industry, Vác) was a Hungarian manufacture of photographic film and paper products originally established in 1922. They ceased to manufacture products in January 2007. Only B&W films were coated by Forte. Colour films were supplied by other manufacturers, and packaged into Forte branding.
Black and white film
Colour negative films
Colour reversal (slide) film
Foma
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Fotochema, n.p. Hradec Králové was a manufacturer of photographic materials in the socialist Czechoslovakia. It was established in 1921 as a priavate company. In 1946 it was nationalized by a decree from the president of the republic.[51] In 1950 all photochemical factories in Czechoslovakia were united under n.p. Fotochema, Hradec Králové.[51] Fotochema had a broad manufacturing program which included black and white negative films, photographic papers, technical materials for medical, industrial and scientific use as well as colour papers and colour reversal films.
In 1990 Fotochema's legal status was changed from national enterprise to state enterprise and all their subsidiary factories became independent. In 1995 Fotochema was privatised and underwent a substantial change in manufacturing program and focused solely on black and white photographic materials.[51]
Black and white films
Black and white reversal (slide) films
Black and white reversal films were initially sold as Fomapan 17, 21 and 24 with label on the box saying "black and white reversal film". During the 70's or at the beginning of the 80's the name was changed to "Fomapan R" (R for reversal).
Colour negative films
Colour reversal (slide) films
FOTOIMPEX
FOTOIMPEX of Berlin, Germany, is a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from the former Eastern Bloc. They acquired the rights to the ADOX name in 2003. Two Black & White films produced by Harman Technology were sold under their own name.
FOTON
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FOTON was the brand name of Warszawskie Zaklady Fototechniczne (Warsaw Phototechnical works) a Polish state owned enterprise established in 1949 in Warsaw producing photographic film. The company was established in a surviving building from the former Jozef Franaszek works on Ul. Wolska (Wolska Street) which had produced photographic and other specialised paper. The Franaszek works was burnt out in the Wola massacre in 1944 during the Warsaw Uprising.
The company manufactured X-ray and black and white cinema film, still camera film (from 1950) and microfilm. At the end of the 1950s, FOTONKOLOR cinematographic positive film for making screen copies was launched and for a brief period colour negative film produced in the 1960s until a decision for the GDR (ORWO) to supply colour film in Comecon countries. Black and white papers and plates and photochemicals and later colour photographic papers under the FOTON brand were produced by a sister company at Bydgoskie Photochemical works dating from 1925 also in Warsaw at Ul. Garbary 3 (from 1970s at Ul. Piękna 13). In 1969 FOTON signed a licensing agreement with Ilford for the production of X-ray and photographic film, however various delays meant the new production line was not opened until the late 70s. FOTON ceased producing film in the 1990s. The buildings were taken over by FOTON Trading Sp. z o.o. and now they serve for commercial activity.[59] Bydgoskie Photochemical works was acquired by Foma Bohemia in 1997 but due to decline of the traditional film market was declared bankrupt in 2007.
Black and white film
Colour film
Fuda
Xiamen Fuda Photographic Materials or Fuda was a Chinese manufacturer of photographic material based in Shanghai, China. In 1984, Kodak helped Fuda build their color film production line with color film being produced under license from Kodak.[64] Kodak China acquired their assets in 1998.[40]
Black and white film
Colour negative film
Fujifilm
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FUJIFILM is a Japanese manufacturer of photographic films, papers and cameras established in 1934. Fujifilm stopped making traditional black and white films and photographic papers in 2018 but in 2019 announced a return to black and white film.[65] They also produce a range of traditional color negative and reversal films (and associated photographic papers and photochemicals) as well as instant film. See Fujifilm photographic films and List of photographic films. Historically, however, they were one of the major producers of colour negative and slide films producing a wide range of own brand professional and consumer films in competition with Kodak and Agfa-Gevaert. (The other main colour film producers; Konica and 3M Ferrania specialising in 'white label' consumer product). The film range is divided into black and white film Neopan, Color negative film Fujicolor and Colour slide film Fujichrome together with instant 'pack film'. They also undertook contract manufacture for AGFA PHOTO colour negative/slide films from c2008-2018.[66][67]
Black and white film
Color negative film
- 200 ISO Super HG II (135) 4th color-sensitive emulsion layer; Captures true color even under fluorescent lights; Two-Stage Timing DIR Couplers improve color brilliance; Enhance edges for outstanding sharpness[75]
- 400 ISO Super HG c1991 on (DIRR couplers, sigma crystal emulsion)[76]
- 1600 ISO Super HG (135) 135-36
- 100 ISO Super G (110) ?–1995
- 100 ISO Super G Plus (135) 1995–2000 "Plus films" = "RT (Real-Tone) Technology" controls the interlayer (color saturation enhancing) effect to produce natural, fine textured skin tones and "ELS (Emulsion Layer Stabilizing) Technology." film stabilser to maintain control the more than 100 organic chemical compounds found in the Super G Plus films[77]
- 200 ISO Super G plus (110, 135) 1995–2000
- 400 ISO Super G plus (135, 120) 1995–2000
- 800 ISO Super G Plus CZ (135) 1995–2000
- 100 ISO Quality (135) (Brazil)
- 100 ISO Quality II (135) (Brazil)
- C100 ISO Basic color film
Colour reversal (slide) film
Instant film
Gevaert
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Gevaert manufactured photographic films before the merger with Agfa.
Gigabit
- Type: Black and white
- Speed: ISO 40, DIN 17°
- Available formats: 35 mm
- Granularity: Extremely fine
- Resolving power: Extremely high
- History: said to be Agfa Copex micrography film, sold with special low-contrast developer to increase dynamic range
- Primary usage: General black-and-white photography, with scanning in mind
- General characteristics: PET base for better film flatness, strong contrast and low exposure tolerance, fine grain not much subject to grain aliasing in usual resolution scans[119]
- Discontinued
Herzog
Johannes Herzog & Co. was a German manufacturer of photographic materials: since 1988 dry plates ("Sonja EW"), B&W films (1901–1964), 1929 "Duxochrom" (sold in USA as "Colorstil“) and Roentgen X-ray films

Ilford
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Ilford is a UK manufacturer of photographic materials based in Mobberley, Cheshire known worldwide for its black and white films, papers and chemicals. Following bankruptcy in 2004 it was rescued in a management buy out and is now a brand of Harman Technology Ltd trading as Ilford Photo. Discontinued film versions include:
Black and white film
Colour negative film
Colour reversal film
Kodak
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Eastman Kodak was founded in 1888. During most of the 20th century, Kodak held a dominant position in photographic film. However Kodak struggled to manage the transition to digital photography and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2012. Whilst Kodak films for still cameras continue to be manufactured by Eastman Kodak in Rochester, New York, US since its Chapter 11 bankruptcy they are now sold and marketed by Kodak Alaris, a separate company controlled by the Kodak UK Pension fund based in Hertfordshire, UK.[120]
See web page taphilo.com[121] for a list of Kodak film number to film type.
Black and white film
Discontinued Kodak black and white films
Color negative film
Color reversal (slide) film
Kodachrome 25, 64, and 200 Professional
Kodachrome was the first practical color reversal film; essentially first commercially-important color film of any kind. It featured extremely fine grain, high saturation, and extremely high sharpness.[145] Kodachrome entered American popular culture with a 1973 song by Paul Simon, as well as a 2017 Hollywood movie.[146]
- Kodachrome was launched as a 16mm movie film in 1935, with a film speed of ISO 10.[146] The first stills version was released the following year.[146]
- Kodachrome II was introduced in 1961; this was available in daylight balanced speeds of ISO 25 and ISO 64, later rebranded as Kodachrome 25 and Kodachrome 64. Kodachrome 25 ceased production in 2001.[146]
- Kodachrome Type F (for flash; stopped being made in 1950s).
- Kodachrome 200 was introduced in November 1986[147] and sold through 2007.[146]
- Later Kodachrome Professional 64 and 200 were added.[when?]
- Processing purchased with film until Justice Department sued around 1954, claiming this was a monopolistic practice. There were relatively few competitors however, with the complex developing machinery necessary.
- At various times Kodachrome was produced in 126, 120, and 110 stills formats, as well as various movie and cine film formats.[146]
- Also available in larger roll film formats and sheet film (until late 1940s, beginning of 1950s).
- The entire Kodachrome emulsion line was discontinued in 2009. The last processor in the world closed down its Kodachrome line at end of 2010.[148]
- Suggested Replacement: Kodak Ektachrome E100d
Ektachrome Lumiere 100
- Professional Film
- Code LPP 6146
- Launch Date: ?
- Discontinued: ?
- Suggested Replacement: ?
- Type: Medium speed color reversal film providing neutral color balance with enhanced color saturation.
- Speed: Temp/EI/Wratten filter no. (Source: Ektachrome Lumiere 100 Data Sht dtd 11–93)
- 5500K/100/none
- 3200K/25/80A
- 3400K/32/80B
- Processing: E-6
- Formats: 135, 120, cut film.
- Kodak Pub No. E-137, "Kodak Ektachrome Lumiere 100 Professional Film"
- Note: A number of photographers noted this film was too cool under some circumstances.[149]
- EKTACHROME 64 Professional Film
- EKTACHROME 100 Professional Film
- EKTACHROME 100 Plus Professional Film
- EKTACHROME 160T Professional Film
- EKTACHROME 320T Professional Film
- EKTACHROME P1600 Professional Film
- EKTACHROME 400X Professional Film
- Ektachrome E100S
- Ektachrome E100D
Konica
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Established 1873 in Japan, Konishiroku (Konica) was a major producer of colour film, cameras and related products, including film development processors and printing technology. Originally Konica film and paper was sold under the brand name of "Sakura" meaning Cherry Blossom in English. Along with 3M Ferrania they were a significant producer of 'white label' consumer color films for both retailers and traditional B&W film producers needing a colour film to repackage under their own brand. Only in later years did they make significant efforts to market film under the Konica brand. In 2003, Konica merged with Minolta to form Konica Minolta. In 2006, the merged company closed down its photo imaging division, which produced color film, color paper, photo chemicals and digital minilab machines (at the time it was the 3rd largest film producer behind Kodak and Fujifilm, AgfaPhoto having collapsed a year earlier).[150] The company produced the following films:
Black and white film
- Sakura Panchro c1946 Format 120
- KONIPAN SS ASA 100 Format 135, 120, Sheet Film
- KONIPAN SSS ASA 200 Format 135
- Konica Infrared 750 nm Format 135, 120
Colour negative film
- Sakuracolor N100 (C-22) (1967–1971)
- Sakuracolor N100 (C-22) (1971–1975)
- Sakuracolor II N100 (1974–c1984) employing a DIR color coupler
- Sakuracolor (C-41) c1975–1980
- Sakuracolor 400 c1976–1984
- SR (c1984–1986) SR 100/ 200/400/1600 Formats 135, Disc (also sold as Sakuracolor SR)
- SR-V (1987) 3200 Format 135 (also sold as Sakuracolor with same names) Monodispersed emulsion
- SR-G (1989–c1994) 100, Format 135
- SR-G 160 Professional, Format 120/220
- Super DD (1990) 100/200/400 Format 135
- GX (1987) 100, 3200 Format 135
- Impresa 50 1991, Format 120 only
- Impresa 100
- Super HR (?–c1991)
- Super SR (1991–c1997) 100, 200 Format 135, 110
- Super XG (1993–c1996) 100 Format 135
- VX (c1994–1999) 100, 200 Format 135
- VX Super 100, Format 135
- Centuria (1999). 100/200/400/800 Format 135
- Centuria 100 Format 120
- Centuria Super
- Pro 160, Professional Portrait film Format 135, 120, 220
- Pro 400, Professional Portrait film Format 135, 120, 220 exp2007
Colour reversal (slide) film
- Sakuracolor R-100 (E-4) (?–1972)
- Sakurachrome R-100 (E-6) (c1983–c1986)
- Konica Chrome 100 (c1986–1990)
KONO!
Launched in 2014, KONO! is a small European analogue photographic company based in Austria that produces a range of 'creative' 35mm format films under both 'Kono!' and 'dubblefilm' brands, the latter in conjunction with mobile app 'dubble'.[151] Most KONO! films are based on stock originally intended for shooting motion pictures, scientific purposes or other places photosensitive emulsions were used. All films are hand rolled onto recycled 135 film cassettes.[152][153]
Color negative films
Lomography
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Headquarters in Vienna, Austria. Lomography is a globally-active organization dedicated to analogue, experimental and creative photography. Lomography offers films under its own brand procured from various manufacturers.
Color negative films
Color reversal (slide) films
Luckyfilm
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Lucky Group Corporation in Baoding, Héběi province, China produced a range of colour, black and white, and chromogenic black and white consumer films. Colour film was produced initially in conjunction with Kodak after signing a 20-year partnership which Kodak ended in 2007 after four years.[160] Production of all consumer films ceased in 2012.[citation needed] In 2017 Luckyfilm, an offshoot of Lucky Group re-released an improved black and white film for the consumer market, however this had ceased to be available by 2019.
Black and white film
Color negative film
Maco
Headquarters in Stapelfeld, Germany. Film sales through www.macodirect.de
ORT
- Type: Black and White (orthochromatic)
- Speed: ISO 25, DIN 15°
- Available formats: 35 mm, 120, Sheet Film
- Granularity: Extremely Fine
- Resolving power: Extremely High (>330lp/mm)
- History: evolution of Agfa Ort25c, same emulsion as MACO EM micrography film, evolved later in ORTO25
- Primary usage: Reprography, Micrography, specialty black and white photography
- General characteristics:
- Discontinued
Negra
Negra Industrial, S A. was a film manufacturer based in Barcelona, Spain established c1928 producing black and white negative film, photographic paper and chemicals. Color film was rebranded stock from other producers mainly Konishiroku (Konica) and 3M (Ferrania). Film production appears to have ended in 1984.[163]
Black and white film
- Negra Negrapan 21 (ISO 100) panchromatic film in 135, 120, 127, 110 and 126 sizes. last films expired 1989.
Color negative film
- Negracolor AR ?–1984 Konica Color
- Negracolor NC80 1970–1973 3M Color Print
- Negracolor NC100 1973–1976 Sakuracolor (Konica)
- Negracolor II 1976–1984 Sakuracolor II (Konica)
- Negracolor 400 1976–1984 Sakuracolor 400 (Konica)
Color reversal (slide) film
- Negracrome 50 1969–1974 3M color slide
ORWO
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After WW2, Agfa was split into two companies: Agfa AG, Leverkusen in West Germany, and VEB Film- und Chemiefaserwerk Agfa Wolfen in East Germany. Initially both companies produced films under the AGFA brand with the same names, such as Isopan F. To distinguish them, the film edge markings were L IF for Agfa Leverkusen, and W IF for Agfa Wolfen. In 1953 in a trade agreement it was agreed that VEB Filmfabrik Agfa Wolfen would have the sole rights to the AGFA brand in Eastern Europe and Agfa AG, would retain sole rights to the AGFA brand in the rest of the world. This hampered Wolfen's exports and therefore after 1964 films from Wolfen were rebranded ORWO (ORiginal WOlfen). ORWO ceased production of film in 1994 following the collapse of the company after German reunification and privatisation. After a brief revival re-branding other manufacturers' products the company was again insolvent in 1997, and the constituent parts were sold off. Part of the original factory survives as the Industry and Film museum Wolfen.[164] However the association of the ORWO name with film lives on as a brand of FilmoTec GmbH who since 1998 produce high quality black and white cinema and technical films, based in Wolfen with coating contracted out. Their cine camera films UN54 and N74 plus are also re-packaged by third parties as still camera film.
Black and white film
Black and white reversal (slide) films
Color negative film
Color reversal (slide) film
Rera
Rera is a small range of photographic films for 127 (4x4) format roll film cameras assembled in Japan by Kawauso-Shoten. Film is bought in and converted for 127 format and sold through main retailers. Discontinued films include:
Black and white film
Color reversal (slide) film
Perutz
Perutz was a German film manufacturer. It was taken over by Agfa-Gevaert in 1964. Films included.
Polaroid
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This section is missing information about most other Polaroid films. (March 2019) |
Instant Roll Film
- Type 40 – Sepia tone 100/21°
- Type 41 – Orthochromatic 100/21°
- Type 42 – Panchromatic 200/24° One of Polaroid's longest-lasting film stocks
- Type 43 – Panchromatic 200/24° Introduced for a short while as a higher-end alternative to type 42
- Type 44 – Panchromatic 400/27°
- Type 46 – Panchromatic 800/30° Produced 8 black and white transparencies
- Type 46L – Panchromatic 800/30° Same as 46, but with a slightly larger slides
- Type 47 – Panchromatic 3000/36° Another one of Polaroid's longest-lasting film stocks
- Type 48 – Color 75/20° Polaroid's first color film stock, produced 6 prints instead of the typical 8
- Type 31 – Panchromatic100/21° All films in the 30 series were made for smaller cameras than the 40 series and produced smaller prints
- Type 32 – Panchromatic 200/24°
- Type 37 – Panchromatic 3000/36°
- Type 38 – Color 75/20°
- Type 20 – Panchromatic 3000/36° The 20 series of films were made for use in the Swinger, Polaroid's first budget camera retailing at $19.95 in 1965
- Type 20c – Panchromatic 3000/36° The first black and white Polaroid film to not require a protective coating on the prints
3¼x4¼ instant pack film
4x5 Instant pack film
4x5 instant sheet film
Type 55
- Type: Black and white Pos/Neg instant film
- Speed: 50/18° (pos), 35/16° (neg)
- Available formats: 4×5 Sheet film
- Granularity:
- Latitude:
- Resolving power:
- History: Discontinued by Polaroid in 2008; production process licensed out
- Primary usage: Test shots, fine art
8x10 instant sheet film
Instant integral film
Instant 35mm slide film
Polaroid B.V.
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Polaroid B.V. is a Dutch photography company that was founded in 2008 as the 'Impossible Project' to re-introduce instant film for Polaroid cameras. Impossible bought the production machinery from Polaroid for $3.1 million[176] and leased a building, called Building Noord, which was formerly part of the Polaroid plant in Enschede, Netherlands but had to re-invent the emulsions and processes. Polaroid Corporation's brand and intellectual property were acquired by Impossible Project's largest shareholder in 2017 and the company was later renamed 'Polaroid Originals' before becoming 'Polaroid' in 2020.[177][178] Based in Enschede, Polaroid manufactures film for its own and selected original Polaroid instant cameras. Instant films are marketed by format rather than emulsion.
Rollei
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The Rollei brand for photographic film is licensed to Maco (Hans O. Mahn GmbH & Co. KG, Maco Photo Products) a German-based supplier of photographic films. They offer a range of black and white and colour films produced by Agfa-Gevaert and other suppliers. Discontinued films are listed below:
Black and white films
R3
- Speed: ISO 200, DIN 24° (can be used from ISO25 to ISO6400)
- Available formats: 35 mm, 120, Sheet Film
- Granularity: Fine
- Resolving power: High
- History: launched in 2004
- Primary usage: General black and white photography
- General characteristics: Fairly wide latitude, PET base for better film flatness, extended spectral sensitivity from IR to near-UV, to be stored in special black cartridges
- Discontinued
ATO (Advanced Technical Ortho)
- same emulsion as Maco Genius Film
- clear base
- suitable for reversal process
ATP1.1 (Advanced Technical Pan)
Rollei Ortho
- orthochromatic film with a clear base
- spectral sensitivity 380–610 nm
- resolving power of 330 lines/mm (with a fine-grain developer)
- especially suited for digital scanning
- Replaced by Ortho Plus in 2017
Rollei Pan
- ISO 25
- clear base, well suited for black and white slides
Retro Tonal
- same emulsion as Maco PO100C
- an orthopanchromatic ("RectePan") film
- clear base
- suitable for reversal process
RSD
- same emulsion as Agfa Copex Slide Direct
- a pre-fogged orthochromatic film specially for negative or slide duplication
- exposure index (EI) in daylight around 0.2 (thus it has a DIN value of -6 !) = about EI 6 + 5 f stops (not many cameras will handle this correctly)
- after a massive exposure will produce a positive in traditional B&W process, i.e. is NOT run through a reversal process; see also solarisation
- contrast adjustment using different developers, i.e. lower contrast: for ex. Rodinal/Adonal (1:25 about 10 mins., 1:50 about 20 mins.) or higher contrast: any paper developer 1+4 about 5 mins.
Color negative film
Color reversal (slide) film
ScanFilm
- same emulsion as Agfa Aviphot Color X400 without a mask, very well suited for scanning
Silberra
The company based in Saint Petersburg, Russia was founded in 2009 producing analog film products. It adopted the Silberra name in 2017 to introduce a range of black and white films.[185]
Black and white films
SPUR
SPUR (Speed Photography & Ultra high Resolution) is a supplier of own brand specialist photochemistry and films based in Langerwehe, Germany.
Street Candy
Vincent Moschetti, the proprietor of the website OneYearWithFilmOnly.com (later renamed OnFilmOnly.com) released his own branded film in 2018. In April 2022 the founder announced closure of the brand due to rising costs.[189] Film cassettes are uniquely packaged in cardboard film canisters.
Svema
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Svema (Russian: Свема, Светочувствительные Материалы) was the former name ("NPO "Svema") of the Shostka Chemical Plant, located in Shostka, Sumy Oblast, Ukraine. It was founded in 1931 in Ukrainian SSR.
"Svema" was the major photographic film manufacturer in the USSR and the second largest film producer in Europe, but their film lost market share in former Soviet countries to imported products during the late 1990s. They made black-and-white photographic film, photographic paper, B&W/colour cine film and magnetic tapes until 2000. Colour film was made with equipment dismantled from the Agfa-Wolfen Factory after World War II. The plant's production of photographic products slowed through the 1990s and ceased film production entirely in 2003 with the final coating of X-ray films there and the plant closed completely in 2005. After attempts by the state to sell the business, bankruptcy processes were completed in 2015. The coating machinery was sold for scrap and the main buildings were demolished c2018.[193]
A decade prior to the plant's closure a small group of Svema employees had founded Astrum holdings in a rented building on the site in 1995, buying bulk film from various sources which they converted and packaged, for retail sale. Originally sold under the Astrum name (film expiring up to 2019), they later acquired rights to the Svema trademark and now apply the name to a range of films for nostalgic value, but this no longer manufactured in Ukraine, only re-packaged there.[194]
All consumer film was produced in 135 and 120 formats, some stocks were also available in sheets, 16mm and 8mm/super 8.
Black and white film
Colour negative film
Colour reversal (slide) film
Tasma
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Tasma – Тасма in Russian Cyrillic characters was a manufacturer of photographic films located in Kazan, Russia, it has been in operation since 1933 (starting as “Film Factory No. 8”. The name “Tasma” is derived from the Russian phrase «Татарские светочувствительные материалы» “TAtarskie Sveto MAterialiy.” – “TAtar Sensitized Materials;”it was adopted by the company in 1974. Prior to the fall of the Soviet Union, the company offered an array of color photographic products from the year 1950 as well, but these were discontinued following the fall of the Iron Curtain. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the company was reorganized as a free enterprise and privatized in 1992. Photographic film production ceased in the 1990s and today they specialise in industrial films including aerial photography films. Films generally supplied without spool in a black paper wrapper and box.
Black and white film
Colour negative film
Colour reversal (slide) film
Valca
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Valca was a Spanish film manufacturer established in 1940 headquartered in Bilbao. The company name comes from the factory location in Sopeñano, Burgos; Valle de Mena (Mena Valley) through which flows the Rio Cadagua (Cadagua River) which provided cooling water for the factory.[195] The company produced black and white negative film, photographic paper and X ray films. Ilford acquired an equity interest in Valca in 1960, resulting in technical co-operation and Valca acting as Ilford distributors in Spain. The agreement lasted until 1976 when Ilford sold its shares.[196][197] It was particularly successful in the X-ray film market and in 1991 it had a 17% share of its national market and 1% of the US market, the latter accounting for 60% of production, with 65% of X-ray film exported in total. While black and white film was produced in-house, colour film was rebranded stock from other suppliers. The company underwent re-structuring in 1991 due to financial problems, reportedly due to poor management and the factory finally closed in 1993.[198][199]
Black and white film
- Valca Sheet Film Autographica – Panchromatica Antihalo
- Valca Sheet Film Retrato V Orthochromatic
- Valca Sheet Film Retrato VV Panchromatic
- Valca Sheet Film Retrato ES Panchromatic
- Valca Diapositiva Dura
- Valca F22 – ASA 125 (sheet film 9×12 cm, 35mm, 120, 620 & 126) Possibly based on FP4
- Valca H27 – ASA 400 Possibly based on Ilford HP3
- Valca H29 – ASA 400 (sheet film, 35mm, 120) Possibly based on Ilford HP4
Colour negative films
- Valcolor, 1974–1975 Sakuracolor N100
- Valcolor II – 1975–1977 Sakuracolor II
- Valcolor II – 1977–1980 (35mm, 126, 120, 110) 3M color print 100
- Valcolor HR100 – ?–1991 (35mm & 126) Konica color 100
See also
References
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