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Motion picture film and resources to help filmmakers capture the world as only they see it.
Kodak continues to produce specialty films and film for newer and more popular consumer formats, but it has discontinued the manufacture of film in most older formats. Among its most famous discontinued film brands was Kodachrome.
The price catalogs and information on how to order film Product Catalog KODAK Motion Picture Products Price Catalog - US Prices (PDF, Effective February 1, 2024)
See B&H's vast selection of Kodak 35mm Film including popular models like Portra 400, Gold 200, Tri-X 400, UltraMax 400, Portra 800 and Ektar 100.
The fine folks at PeriscopeFilm have gotten their hands on an old educational film created by Eastman Kodak in the 1950s. While the copy of the vintage movie is incomplete, it shows part of a...
For filmmakers who aspire to capture the world as only they see it.
A Kodak film user's guide - every film in production today and when and how to shoot it. Portra, Ektar, Color Plus, Ultramax, Kodak Gold, etc.
Unlike the Kodak No.1, the photographer had to load their own film cannister (which cost 15 cents each) with each cartridge holding six exposures. The Brownie took off and by the end of 1905, it ...
We've reviewed every Kodak film emulsion designed for professional photographers; and in this roundup we give you a look at each of them.
The world’s finest-grained 100-speed black-and-white film, T-MAX 100 lets you explore the extremes of image quality and enlargement with nearly invisible grain. And its high resolving power and incredible sharpness satisfy even the most detail-obsessed artist. Find out more.