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The last roll of Kodachrome

I never really liked Kodachrome - too saturated. I shot Ektachrome, mostly. Or Illford HP.

But frankly, I'm surprised anyone is still using film. I love digital. And I don't use photoshop.
 
We had an Relic Run attendee shooting old 35mm Kodachrome, I'm really excited to see how it turned out (Charles you reading this :D).

Is this a process another film company can reproduce or something very proprietary to Kodak?
 
I loved Kodachrome. Shot a lot of Ektachrome, too, but the warmth of Kodachrome was my favorite. 40 years on, the old slides are still preferable to what I'm getting now. Kodak made a great product. I'd love to have a "Kodachrome" setting on my digital camera today!
 
Being a huge history fan, I really appreciate this post. My youngest son, has never had to have a picture of him be developed! Thanks again.
 
IIRC the Kodachrome process is time intensive (i.e. expensive) and not exactly envrio friendly due to the chemicals but I think it's the cost and lack of film sales that caused Kodak to stop production.

I've got a box of slides from about 20 years ago that still look incredible.

Anyone try Fujichrome-is it close?

In the story about the last roll it mentioned he shot that roll in many locations around the globe-I wonder how he protected the film from the airport security and their fiendish ways. I'm guessing the roll had to stay in the body of the camera the whole time.
 

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