Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There is a rather large book that has gone through and tested all sorts of films using extended projection times. exposure to heat, fading due to Daylight etc. I checked it out of a library a while back... The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs : Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, Slides, and Motion Pictures by Henry Wilhelm, Carol Brower This is the reference on the subject. It covers everything... different types of paper, film etc..... show actual fade test comparisons Many of the posting on the lug seem to be making a faulty assumption that the fading of Ektachrome and Anscochrome is due to projection and Kodachrome resists it better..... not so.... also remember that many of the early Ektachrome were processed in earlier chemistry.... different technology, different films..... there are many factors and projection is only one them.... humidity and temperature during storage are two biggies as well. His conclusions are as follows... Kodachrome is the best slide medium for long term dark storage..... but it fades at a far faster rate than Fujichrome films as it is projected. A Fujichrome slide can be projected for a cumilative time of 2 1/2 hours without any loss for critical usage.... In can be projected about 5 hours before it noticeably begins to deteriorate.... I truthfully wasn't paying much attention to the Kodachrome figure since all I use is Fujichrome.... 1 hr to 1 1/2 maybe total projection time if I remember right.... laying on a light table adds up to that counts too folks......... He either recommends shooting Fujichrome exclusively or using Kodachrome for long term storage but duping on to Fuji CDU for projection use.... If you really want to find out..... take two identical slides.... stick one in a projector for an hour, look at it and see how much it has faded. stick it back in for another 1/2 hour, check it again. do it until you've projected it for 4 or five hours. Do it for both Fujichrome and Kodakchrome or Ektachrome. Keep good notes and compare the results..... But to argue that Kodachrome doesn't fade as fast E-6 films is not always right..... if you project your images, it will fade at a faster rate than Fuji. Either way read the book..... don't wait for the movie.... Duane Birkey it't title is something like care