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Kodak Ektar 100 Professional ISO 100, 35mm, 36 Exposures, Color Negative Film Photographic Film : Electronics

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Original price was: $28.00.Current price is: $23.95.

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World’s finest-grain color negative film Extraordinary enlargement capability from a 35mm negative. Ultra-vivid color and optimized sharpness. Distinct edges and fine detail. Incorporates entertainment imaging’s KODAK vision film technology. Micro-structure optimized t-grain emulsions.

Brand KODAK
Model Name FBA_603 1330
Film Color Color
Film Format Type 35mm
Exposures per Roll 36

10 reviews for Kodak Ektar 100 Professional ISO 100, 35mm, 36 Exposures, Color Negative Film Photographic Film : Electronics

  1. Matt

    This film has great colors, a unique look to it, and will make your 35mm shots look more like a medium format shot.But whoever is on amazon selling this stuff (and portra) for $25 or even $30+ a roll is crazy. Buy this on B&H, Samy’s Camera, or Adorama for around $15. $15 still isn’t cheap for film, but no film is cheap nowadays.

  2. Anthony J. Tarquinio

    If you have read my other reviews regarding color print film, you will know that this is the first time using ISO 100. I was/am impressed with the results. Now, others out there may say I am bananas, but this film being slower, does not offer a very large window of forgiveness. It demands near perfection from the user and the equipment. Which for me is a problem because like me, my equipment is old. I have older releases from Pentax and as everyone knows, light meters are not made to last forever. Anyway, a very good product from Kodak. I honestly and highly recommend this film for a lot of fun with good results.Thanks for reading,Tony

  3. NorhLoudspeaker

    I have been taking photographs with good quality cameras for over 40 years. I got started when I was in the Army. I stopped using film cameras until recently. I got reintroduced to film photography seeing how cheap I could get outstanding quality film cameras these days. I picked up the Minolta Maxxum 7000 and four lenses for less than $100.00.I shot a roll of Ektar 100 and sent it to Walmart for developing. They sent me back photos and a CD with the images on them. I put some of these up on Flikr:https://www.flickr.com/photos/85738626@N00/sets/72157651613334258/I tell my friends to go out and buy film cameras while they are still so inexpensive. Does it really make for someone who mostly uses their phone to take photos to leave a $1500 digital camera in the drawer. Doesn’t it make more sense to buy a high quality film camera and some good lenses and use film for those occasions where you want better than phone quality? Film will provide more tonality than digital. I have both digital and film now. There are reasons to use both. For color, Ektar is my favorite film.

  4. Cary

    I have been a DSLR user who thought film was dead, and there is no comparison between film and digital, as digital will win. Then came Kodak Ektar 100. I am now sold on film. Kodak Ektar 100 is by far the best film for color photography out there. It gives amazing contrast, crisp detal, great colors, and the grain is nearly non-existent. It makes my DSLR seem obsolete. I did a comparison shots between my DSLR and SLR with Ektar 100, and I favored the detail of Ektar. Like one reviewer said, it is not a film for beginners though. You can’t just shoot it and expect it to come out great. Know your lighting, and this film will work like nothing else. with that said though, you will not find a digital camera in the world that can produce the results of Ektar without first post processing the images from RAW. I am planning on buying some more to stockpile this lovely film.

  5. David Jackel

    Great seller. Item was as described and ahead of the shipping schedule

  6. J. Busse

    I shoot DLSR and film and use film to teach my grandkids photography. This is pretty forgiving and dirt cheap. Costco develops at a reasonable price and we can generally see the difference between these and the DLSR photos. When we actually contact print these the difference is striking. Seems DLSR stores mostly print at 600 dpi. Big deal. 400asa is worth 5x that. 100asa prints at 8000dpi equiv. So loits of comparisons between old and new photography are not technical they are for sales. I guess it really doesn’t matter if you have a ten gazillion dip dlsr if the printer is 600dpi., at least for snaps and anything smaller than billboard size. Maybe DLSR high DPI is good for cropps but overall I really like regular film for quality work.

  7. Eric N. Greaux

    Ektar 100 is among the best 35mm films available today. It is a very fine grained film which produces super sharp images. I love the deep color saturation and contrast as well. I disagree with the review that states that Ektar doesn’t do well at night as I use it pretty routinely for night photos with great results. I don’t consider Reala to be in the same class as Ektar. I also find it very forgiving as I have exposed it at ASA 400 and still got acceptable results. The colors went super-saturated though. This film is great for strobist work and product shots due to it’s sharpness. I think it is great for portraits as well even though you probably would benefit from softening the sharpness down some. I’ve compared results to a D7000, D300 and other digital cameras and they still aren’t on par with Ektar. I also appreciate how flat it lays on my Epson V700 scanner; very well behaved! I use this film a lot on several different film cameras and lens combinations. I have several examples on my flickr page: username “greauxe” then search for “ektar” from my photostream

  8. Old Man Walking

    I have ordered film before from a different vendor that came without the box so you can’t tell if it is in date or not.

  9. Steven D.

    This is indeed professional grade film. 36 shots is better than 24. With this ISO, the clarity and detail of the image lend itself to a lovely enlarged print, the contrast is exceptional. The colors are quite rich and more accurate than the eye. I can’t think of a subject that doesn’t look better on ISO film print as opposed to a digital. You can load up a memory card with a lot of shots and print what you like, no real skill needed-not as compared to handling precise exposures on film. But the pay off is worth it.

  10. S.G. Österlin

    I got back into photography a few years ago with a Minolta SRT-202. It’s a manual camera, so my skills aren’t that great yet, but this film has the richest colors of any I’ve yet used.

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