Fuji Provia 100F RDPIII 120 film 5 rolls BOXED EXPIRED 08/2005 kept mostly frozen LOMO HOLGA -SOLD

35,00 

Fujichrome Provia 100F RDP III 120 film 5 rolls BOXED EXP 08/2005
Fujichrome Provia 100F Professional [RDPIII] specifications

Out of stock

SKU: FujiProvia100F_120_box5_exp082005 Category: Tags: , , ,

Description

ALL FILMS HAVE EXPIRED, no guarantee of functioning is given!

PLEASE NOTE: I have the most time kept them in deep freeze (at least -18 degrees Celsius) and some of them I tested and they seemed to be ok.

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Please see all photos for more info/guidance & make your own judgment on condition etc.

Everything shown in the photos above is included in the sale, nothing more, nothing less!

All photos shown are of the actual item/s you are buying & what you will receive.

+ + + THE ITEMS ARE LOCATED IN FINLAND (EU) + + +

NO CUSTOMS TAX AND NO VAT TO THE ITEM PRICE IF YOU ARE IN EU + + +

SELLING AS A BUSINESS (BUT NO LOCAL VAT IS ADDED TO THIS ITEM!) SEE TERMS & CONDITIONS

PLEASE READ FULL DESCRIPTION BEFORE BUYING

MANY THANKS FOR LOOKING!

PLEASE CHECK OUT MY OTHER FILMS / CAMERAS / DARKROOM ITEMS FOR SALE,

MUCH MORE TO COME!

 

I bought these films new from a professional photo store in Helsinki, Finland in 2002 or 2003, I think. They were kept in a refrigerator storage (2-6 degrees Celsius). I kept ALL my films until July 2014 in deep fridge (at least -18 degrees Celsius) basically from the moment I got them. Then, as my company moved to a new location I had no more enough deep freeze place for all my films, like these sheets. Inside, where the films have been stored, the room temperature has been ca. + 3 .. 10 degrees Celsius during wintertime (ca. November – April) and ca. + 10 .. 17 degrees Celsius at other times. During January – May 2016 ALL films were well covered outside at ca. -33 .. + 10 degrees Celsius and after that time I moved all my films inside (temperatures as above). Usually, black-and-white film is not sensible at all for expiry dates, as it has no colors to go fishy.

I used to travel quite a lot, and I so loved taking bw and slides. I took black-and-white negatives so that I could make my own exhibition prints in the darkroom, and many time no colors were needed and the wide exposure range of film was always a great asset. As my father had taken color positives already many decades before me, and we used to watch the slides on his old projector and his Super8 bw movie films with the family together, I might need no further explanation to the slide photography of mine? Well, I do. The colors of the slides I have always taken much superior than any color negatives could render. As I got my first scanner in 1999 (Minolta Dimage Scan Multi, pretty good machine scanner running also 120 and with 35 mm slide feeder – interested?), I already had more than 30000 slides to scan (starting around 1990.. 1996 really), which was more than double the amount my father had taken during his 4 decades, so my I had to keep an eye of the costs as well. So film scanning has been a long time my business. Then, as my appetite grew I got more machines and more and more.. and you guess how that all ends?

Having a sickness that some name photography or being a photographer – but I call it the-sickness-of-pressing-the-button, means that I have never been a strong person pro/contra specific film types, as long as there is pro/professional label marked or indicated. The Fuji slides I liked a lot, especially the Provia and Velvia (50) series, though the latter is way too saturated to be used in conditions without strong sunlight, according to my taste. The Provia 100F film is really sharp and captures well and accurately colors, just what I needed for great landscape photography. I could also easily push it well 2 stops, running it as 400 ASA.

I tested on February 2016 a roll of Kodak Ektachrome 100GX (expired 06/2006) that I have stored similarly to the films sold here. I also tested many other films at the same time, like Provia 100 on 4×5″ sheet, and the tests suggest that the slide films have suffered less the aging than the color negatives. In all, I’d say my films are still usable, but not as such as they were before expiry.

I think the films are excellent material for you if you’re keen on LOMO or HOLGA or other creative photography, like if you fancy cross processing in film developing. You could even cross AND use the same roll multiple times and get these kind of great effects! 🙂

The Fuji Provia 100F RDPIII is still in manufacture. A box of five 120 rolls costs in Finland 48.00 € including 24 % VAT in Telefoto.

I am selling these five rolls 120 film expired on 08/2005, all unopened in their plastic wrapping and in the original box for 35 euros.

 

Yes, of course I will combine shipping for reduced shipping costs. I urge you to my buy more from me and will be flexible with it. Please note the somewhat expensive shipping costs from Finland, especially if insurance is needed. If the value of order gets to a higher level, I insist on taken an insurance for the shipping.

If you buy this item – please keep it in deep freezer for best results! 🙂

If you have more questions, please contact me directly.

Klaus Riederer, PhD, MSc
KAR Oy Ab GmbH Ltd S. A. R. L., CEO www.kar.fi
© 2016 We-Love-Film-Cameras-Printing-Baking-KAR-Ltd-FI-Outlet

Additional information

Weight 0.15 kg
Dimensions 15 × 8 × 3 cm

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