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#1
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Kodak's High Definition Film
I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two
speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consume...AdvantixFilmHD On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a 200 speed film. Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" film? By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for APS: http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...q-locale=en_US http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...q-locale=en_US |
#3
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Kodak's High Definition Film
If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product.
They do offer it in Europe it's called Royal Supra 100 in 35mm. In APS it's called High Definition 100, they are the same emulsion and yes- they are both real 100 ISO films. wrote in message ... If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. Of course this is in addition to not offering the film in an APS format in the US - a crime in itself. There is also the possibility that what they're offering is actually the 200 speed film, packaged in a 100 speed box. It appears that in C41 there is ample room for fudging a film's speed. If this is the case, I'm not sure what the reasoning would be. It does appear however that they're not offering the "200" speed APS version in the UK, based on the websites I've quoted.. Anna Nimotti wrote: On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 01:22:14 GMT, wrote: I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consume...AdvantixFilmHD On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a 200 speed film. Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" film? By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for APS: http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...q-locale=en_US http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...q-locale=en_US I don't know what Jessops are selling, but all the High Definition APS film I've ever seen offered in the UK has been ISO 100. It works when exposed as ISO 100 too! I haven't tried a comparison test exposing it at ISO 200. Maybe I should? Anyhow, don't pay Jessops prices for it! £5.49 a roll? Pah! It's only £5.85 for THREE rolls at www.7dayshop.com ! -- a n n @ n i m o t t i . p o r t 5 . c o m |
#4
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Kodak's High Definition Film
Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece
of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. Joseph Kewfi wrote: If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. They do offer it in Europe it's called Royal Supra 100 in 35mm. In APS it's called High Definition 100, they are the same emulsion and yes- they are both real 100 ISO films. wrote in message this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. Of course this is in addition to not offering the film in an APS format in the US - a crime in itself. There is also the possibility that what they're offering is actually the 200 speed film, packaged in a 100 speed box. It appears that in C41 there is ample room for fudging a film's speed. If this is the case, I'm not sure what the reasoning would be. It does appear however that they're not offering the "200" speed APS version in the UK, based on the websites I've quoted.. Anna Nimotti wrote: On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 01:22:14 GMT, wrote: I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consume...AdvantixFilmHD On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a 200 speed film. Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" film? By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for APS: http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...q-locale=en_US http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...q-locale=en_US I don't know what Jessops are selling, but all the High Definition APS film I've ever seen offered in the UK has been ISO 100. It works when exposed as ISO 100 too! I haven't tried a comparison test exposing it at ISO 200. Maybe I should? Anyhow, don't pay Jessops prices for it! £5.49 a roll? Pah! It's only £5.85 for THREE rolls at www.7dayshop.com ! -- a n n @ n i m o t t i . p o r t 5 . c o m |
#5
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Kodak's High Definition Film
wrote in :
Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. How can it be "un-american" if it is done by an Americans? Joseph Kewfi wrote: If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. They do offer it in Europe it's called Royal Supra 100 in 35mm. In APS it's called High Definition 100, they are the same emulsion and yes- they are both real 100 ISO films. wrote in message this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. Of course this is in addition to not offering the film in an APS format in the US - a crime in itself. There is also the possibility that what they're offering is actually the 200 speed film, packaged in a 100 speed box. It appears that in C41 there is ample room for fudging a film's speed. If this is the case, I'm not sure what the reasoning would be. It does appear however that they're not offering the "200" speed APS version in the UK, based on the websites I've quoted.. Anna Nimotti wrote: On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 01:22:14 GMT, wrote: I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consume...ay/advantix/?t ype=AdvantixFilmHD On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a 200 speed film. Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" film? By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for APS: http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...th=2/3/9/543/1 096&pq-locale=en_US http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...th=2/3/9/543/1 094/1097&pq-locale=en_US I don't know what Jessops are selling, but all the High Definition APS film I've ever seen offered in the UK has been ISO 100. It works when exposed as ISO 100 too! I haven't tried a comparison test exposing it at ISO 200. Maybe I should? Anyhow, don't pay Jessops prices for it! £5.49 a roll? Pah! It's only £5.85 for THREE rolls at www.7dayshop.com ! -- a n n @ n i m o t t i . p o r t 5 . c o m Attachment decoded: untitled-2.txt --------------1667FFF5DD8FA03367C06628 !doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en" html body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. pJoseph Kewfi wrote: blockquote TYPE=CITEstyle/style If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. font face="Arial"font size=-1They do offer it in Europe it's called Royal Supra 100 in 35mm. In APS it's called High Definition 100, they are the same emulsion and yes- they are both real 100 ISO films./font/font blockquote dir=ltr style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"<a /a wrote in message a "news:3FD11E /a...If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. Of course this is in addition to not offering the film in an APS format in the US - a crime in itself. brThere is also the possibility that what they're offering is actually the 200 speed film, packaged in a 100 speed box. It appears that in C41 there is ample room for fudging a film's speed. If this is the case, I'm not sure what the reasoning would be. It does appear however that they're not offering the "200" speed APS version in the UK, based on the websites I've quoted.. pAnna Nimotti wrote: blockquote TYPE="CITE"On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 01:22:14 GMT, wrote: p I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two br speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that br the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. br a href="http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consumer/films/everyday/advantix/?ty pe=AdvantixFilmHD"http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consumer/films/everyday /advantix/?type=AdvantixFilmHD/a br br On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in br the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a br 200 speed film. br Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or br could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" br film? br br By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for br APS: br a href="http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=2/3/9/543/10 96&pq-locale=en_US"http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-pat h=2/3/9/543/1096&pq-locale=en_US/a br br a href="http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=2/3/9/543/10 94/1097&pq-locale=en_US"http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?p q-path=2/3/9/543/1094/1097&pq-locale=en_US/a pI don't know what Jessops are selling, but all the High Definition APS brfilm I've ever seen offered in the UK has been ISO 100. It works when brexposed as ISO 100 too! I haven't tried a comparison test exposing it brat ISO 200. Maybe I should? pAnyhow, don't pay Jessops prices for it! p£5.49 a roll? Pah! It's only £5.85 for THREE rolls at www.7dayshop.com br! br-- bra n n @ n i m o t t i . p o r t 5 . c o m/blockquote /blockquote /blockquote /body /html Attachment decoded: untitled-3.htm --------------1667FFF5DD8FA03367C06628-- |
#6
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Kodak's High Definition Film
Communist infiltrators ;-)
"JBee" wrote in message ... wrote in : Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. How can it be "un-american" if it is done by an Americans? Joseph Kewfi wrote: If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. They do offer it in Europe it's called Royal Supra 100 in 35mm. In APS it's called High Definition 100, they are the same emulsion and yes- they are both real 100 ISO films. wrote in message this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. Of course this is in addition to not offering the film in an APS format in the US - a crime in itself. There is also the possibility that what they're offering is actually the 200 speed film, packaged in a 100 speed box. It appears that in C41 there is ample room for fudging a film's speed. If this is the case, I'm not sure what the reasoning would be. It does appear however that they're not offering the "200" speed APS version in the UK, based on the websites I've quoted.. Anna Nimotti wrote: On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 01:22:14 GMT, wrote: I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consume...ay/advantix/?t ype=AdvantixFilmHD On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a 200 speed film. Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" film? By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for APS: http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...th=2/3/9/543/1 096&pq-locale=en_US http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQueri...th=2/3/9/543/1 094/1097&pq-locale=en_US I don't know what Jessops are selling, but all the High Definition APS film I've ever seen offered in the UK has been ISO 100. It works when exposed as ISO 100 too! I haven't tried a comparison test exposing it at ISO 200. Maybe I should? Anyhow, don't pay Jessops prices for it! £5.49 a roll? Pah! It's only £5.85 for THREE rolls at www.7dayshop.com ! -- a n n @ n i m o t t i . p o r t 5 . c o m Attachment decoded: untitled-2.txt --------------1667FFF5DD8FA03367C06628 !doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en" html body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. pJoseph Kewfi wrote: blockquote TYPE=CITEstyle/style If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. font face="Arial"font size=-1They do offer it in Europe it's called Royal Supra 100 in 35mm. In APS it's called High Definition 100, they are the same emulsion and yes- they are both real 100 ISO films./font/font blockquote dir=ltr style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"<a /a wrote in message a "news:3FD11E /a...If this is the case, Kodak's holding out on their 35mm users on both sides of the Atlantic by not offering the High Definition ISO 100 product. Of course this is in addition to not offering the film in an APS format in the US - a crime in itself. brThere is also the possibility that what they're offering is actually the 200 speed film, packaged in a 100 speed box. It appears that in C41 there is ample room for fudging a film's speed. If this is the case, I'm not sure what the reasoning would be. It does appear however that they're not offering the "200" speed APS version in the UK, based on the websites I've quoted.. pAnna Nimotti wrote: blockquote TYPE="CITE"On Fri, 05 Dec 2003 01:22:14 GMT, wrote: p I believe that Kodak's "High Definition" film is just available in two br speeds: 200&400. However on their UK website, Kodak is indicating that br the APS size of this film is actually 100 speed. br a href="http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consumer/films/everyday/advantix/?ty pe=AdvantixFilmHD"http://wwwuk.kodak.com/UK/en/consumer/films/everyday /advantix/?type=AdvantixFilmHD/a br br On the Jessops site they list the APS High Definition film as ISO 100 in br the "details" section but in the "features" section, they show it as a br 200 speed film. br Could this just be a typo on the Kodak site (copied over to Jessops) or br could Kodak be encouraging Britons to overexpose their "High Definition" br film? br br By the way their US website lists only 200&400 in 35mm and only 200 for br APS: br a href="http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=2/3/9/543/10 96&pq-locale=en_US"http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-pat h=2/3/9/543/1096&pq-locale=en_US/a br br a href="http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?pq-path=2/3/9/543/10 94/1097&pq-locale=en_US"http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier.jhtml?p q-path=2/3/9/543/1094/1097&pq-locale=en_US/a pI don't know what Jessops are selling, but all the High Definition APS brfilm I've ever seen offered in the UK has been ISO 100. It works when brexposed as ISO 100 too! I haven't tried a comparison test exposing it brat ISO 200. Maybe I should? pAnyhow, don't pay Jessops prices for it! p£5.49 a roll? Pah! It's only £5.85 for THREE rolls at www.7dayshop.com br! br-- bra n n @ n i m o t t i . p o r t 5 . c o m/blockquote /blockquote /blockquote /body /html Attachment decoded: untitled-3.htm --------------1667FFF5DD8FA03367C06628-- |
#7
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Kodak's High Definition Film
"JBee" wrote in message ... wrote in : Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. How can it be "un-american" if it is done by an Americans? Don't confuse capitalism with americanism. They are two entirely different things. Capitalism does not require either a democracy or republic. |
#8
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Kodak's High Definition Film
jjs wrote:
Don't confuse capitalism with americanism. They are two entirely different things. Capitalism does not require either a democracy or republic. Take a look at mainland China for a shining example of this. Dana |
#9
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Kodak's High Definition Film
"jjs" wrote in
: "JBee" wrote in message ... wrote in : Thanks for your enlightening response. Now Kodak's going to get a piece of my mind! It's bad enough we can't get Fuji's APS slide film, but to export a 100 speed APS film to Europe and to deny US consumers that same product is simply un-American. How can it be "un-american" if it is done by an Americans? Don't confuse capitalism with americanism. They are two entirely different things. Capitalism does not require either a democracy or republic. Capitalism? Where did I mention that? |
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